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Intended for healthcare professionals

2021 ISAAR Special Collection

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  • Jae-Hee Lee
  • Hwan Shim
  • Bruce Gantz
  • Inyong Choi

Abstract

Auditory selective attention is a crucial top-down cognitive mechanism for understanding speech in noise. Cochlear implant (CI) users display great variability in speech-in-noise performance that is not easily explained by peripheral auditory profile or ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Dec 4, 2022
  • Tobias Neher
  • Signe Hjorth Fogh
  • Shno Koiek

Abstract

Using the Danish ‘børneDAT’ corpus, the current study aimed to (1) collect normative masked speech recognition data for 6–13-year-olds in conditions with and without interaural difference cues, (2) evaluate the test–retest reliability of these ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Nov 30, 2022
  • Helia Relaño-Iborra
  • Dorothea Wendt
  • Mihaela Beatrice Neagu
  • Abigail Anne Kressner
  • Torsten Dau
  • Per Bækgaard

Abstract

Pupillometry data are commonly reported relative to a baseline value recorded in a controlled pre-task condition. In this study, the influence of the experimental design and the preparatory processing related to task difficulty on the baseline pupil size ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Nov 25, 2022
  • Pushkar Deshpande
  • Christian Brandt
  • Stefan Debener
  • Tobias Neher

Abstract

Effective communication requires good speech perception abilities. Speech perception can be assessed with behavioral and electrophysiological methods. Relating these two types of measures to each other can provide a basis for new clinical tests. In ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Nov 24, 2022
  • Andreea Micula
  • Jerker Rönnberg
  • Patrycja Książek
  • Reena Murmu Nielsen
  • Dorothea Wendt
  • Lorenz Fiedler
  • Elaine Hoi Ning Ng

Abstract

The aim of the current study was to investigate whether task-evoked pupillary responses measured during encoding, individual working memory capacity and noise reduction in hearing aids were associated with the likelihood of subsequently recalling an item ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Oct 27, 2022
  • Teresa Y.C. Ching
  • Linda Cupples
  • Vicky W. Zhang

Abstract

The presence of congenital permanent childhood hearing loss has a negative impact on children’s development and lives. The current literature documents weaknesses in speech perception in noise and language development in many children with hearing loss. ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Oct 26, 2022
  • Mengfan Wu
  • Stine Christiansen
  • Michal Fereczkowski
  • Tobias Neher

Abstract

Hearing aids (HA) are the most common type of rehabilitation treatment for age-related hearing loss. However, HA users often obtain limited benefit from their devices, particularly in noisy environments, and thus many HA candidates do not use them at all. ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Aug 9, 2022
  • Mengchao Zhang
  • Richard M. Stern
  • Deborah Moncrieff
  • Catherine Palmer
  • Christopher A. Brown

Abstract

Non-traumatic noise exposure has been shown in animal models to impact the processing of envelope cues. However, evidence in human studies has been conflicting, possibly because the measures have not been specifically parameterized based on listeners’ ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Aug 5, 2022
  • Moritz Wächtler
  • Josef Kessler
  • Martin Walger
  • Hartmut Meister

Abstract

In cocktail party situations multiple talkers speak simultaneously, which causes listening to be perceptually and cognitively challenging. Such situations can either be static (fixed target talker) or dynamic, meaning the target talker switches ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Jul 18, 2022
  • Virginia Best
  • Lucas S Baltzell
  • H Steven Colburn

Abstract

While many studies have reported a loss of sensitivity to interaural time differences (ITDs) carried in the fine structure of low-frequency signals for listeners with hearing loss, relatively few data are available on the perception of ITDs carried in the ...
Open AccessResearch articleFirst published Jun 27, 2022