نتایج جستجو برای: acceptable noise level anl test

تعداد نتایج: 1983163  

Journal: :Journal of the American Academy of Audiology 2005
Ashley W Harkrider Steven Brad Smith

Acceptable noise level (ANL) is unrelated to sentence recognition in noise but may be related to phoneme recognition in noise (PRN). Individual differences in efferent activity in medial olivocochlear bundle (MOCB) and acoustic reflex (AR) pathways may account for intersubject variability in ANL and PRN. Monotic and dichotic ANL, monotic PRN, contralateral suppression of transient evoked otoaco...

Journal: :Frontiers in psychology 2016
Xaver Koch Gertjan Dingemanse André Goedegebure Esther Janse

The acceptable noise level (ANL) test, in which individuals indicate what level of noise they are willing to put up with while following speech, has been used to guide hearing aid fitting decisions and has been found to relate to prospective hearing aid use. Unlike objective measures of speech perception ability, ANL outcome is not related to individual hearing loss or age, but rather reflects ...

Journal: :Journal of the American Academy of Audiology 2006
Deborah von Hapsburg Junghwa Bahng

The acceptable noise level (ANL) is the maximum amount of background noise that listeners are willing to accept while listening to speech. ANL has not been studied in listeners who use languages other than English. The purpose of this study was to explore whether ANLs obtained from Korean listeners in both English and Korean were comparable to ANLs obtained from monolingual English listeners. T...

Journal: :Journal of the American Academy of Audiology 2003
Deanna S Rogers Ashley W Harkrider Samuel B Burchfield Anna K Nabelek

The acceptance of background noise can be assessed by having participants select the maximum background noise level (BNL) to which they are willing to listen while following speech at their most comfortable listening level (MCL). The difference between the selected BNL and MCL is the acceptable noise level (ANL). Preliminary investigations have revealed large between-participant ANL differences...

2014
Hemanth N. Shetty Sankalapa Mahadev Devamma Veeresh

The following objectives of the study were formulated: i) to investigate differences in measured signal to noise ratios while recording speech-evoked auditory brainstem response (cABR) and cortical late latency response (LLR) in low and high acceptable noise level (ANL) groups; and ii) to compare peak to peak amplitude of cABR (V-A) and LLR (N1-P2) in low and high ANL groups. A total of 23 norm...

2015
Hyun-Jung Ahn Junghwa Bahng Jae Hee Lee

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Acceptable noise level (ANL) is a measure of the maximum background noise level (BNL) that a person is willing to tolerate while following a target story. Although researchers have used various sources of target sound in ANL measures, a limited type of background noise has been used. Extending the previous study of Gordon-Hickey & Moore (2007), the current study determ...

2016
Steen Østergaard Olsen Lars Holme Nielsen Johannes Lantz Jonas Brännström

Objective: The acceptable noise level (ANL) is used to quantify the amount of background noise that subjects can accept while listening to speech, and is suggested for prediction of individual hearing aid use. The aim of this study was to assess the repeatability of the ANL measured in normal-hearing subjects using running Danish and non-semantic speech materials as stimuli and modulated speech...

Journal: :International journal of audiology 2012
Steen Østergaard Olsen Lars Holme Nielsen Johannes Lantz K Jonas Brännström

OBJECTIVE The acceptable noise level (ANL) is used to quantify the amount of background noise that subjects can accept while listening to speech, and is suggested for prediction of individual hearing-aid use. The aim of this study was to assess the repeatability of the ANL measured in normal-hearing subjects using running Danish and non-semantic speech materials as stimuli and modulated speech-...

Journal: :Journal of the American Academy of Audiology 2009
Heidi Peeters Francis Kuk Chi-chuen Lau Denise Keenan

PURPOSE To measure the subjective and objective improvement of speech intelligibility in noise offered by a commercial hearing aid that uses a fully adaptive directional microphone and a noise reduction algorithm that optimizes the Speech Intelligibility Index (SII). RESEARCH DESIGN Comparison of results on the Hearing in Noise Test (HINT) and the Acceptable Noise Level task (ANL). STUDY SA...

2013
Cliff Franklin Laura V. Johnson Letitia White Clay Franklin Laura Smith-Olinde

Objectives. This study examined the relationship between acceptable noise level (ANL) and personality. ANL is the difference between a person's most comfortable level for speech and the loudest level of background noise they are willing to accept while listening to speech. Design. Forty young adults with normal hearing participated. ANLs were measured and two personality tests (Big Five Invento...

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