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1
International Collegium of Rehabilitative Audiology (ICRA) recommendations for the construction of multilingual speech tests ...
Akeroyd, Michael A; Arlinger, Stig; Bentler, Ruth A. - : Taylor & Francis, 2015
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2
Dynamic Relation Between Working Memory Capacity and Speech Recognition in Noise During the First 6 Months of Hearing Aid Use
Ng, Elaine H. N.; Classon, Elisabet; Larsby, Birgitta. - : SAGE Publications, 2014
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3
System identification of feedback in hearing aids
In: Acoustical Society of America. The journal of the Acoustical Society of America. - Melville, NY : AIP 105 (1999) 6, 3481-3496
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4
Variations in the feedback of hearing aids
In: Acoustical Society of America. The journal of the Acoustical Society of America. - Melville, NY : AIP 106 (1999) 5, 2821-2833
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5
Verbal Information-processing Capabilities and Cochlear Implants: Implications for Preoperative Predictors of Speech Understanding
Lyxell, Björn; Andersson, Jan; Arlinger, Stig. - : Oxford University Press, 1996
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6
Reproducibility of the electric response components in clinical electrocochleography
In: Audiology. - London : Decker Europe 33 (1994) 5, 254-263
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7
Speech recognition and just-follow-conversation tasks for normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners with different maskers
In: Audiology. - London : Decker Europe 33 (1994) 3, 165-176
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8
Masking of speech by amplitude-modulated noise
In: Acoustical Society of America. The journal of the Acoustical Society of America. - Melville, NY : AIP 95 (1994) 1, 518-529
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9
An International Comparison of Long-Term Average Speech Spectra
Abstract: The long‐term average speech spectrum (LTASS) and some dynamic characteristics of speech were determined for 12 languages: English (several dialects), Swedish, Danish, German, French (Canadian), Japanese, Cantonese, Mandarin, Russian, Welsh, Singhalese, and Vietnamese. The LTASS only was also measured for Arabic. Speech samples (18) were recorded, using standardized equipment and procedures, in 15 localities for (usually) ten male and ten female talkers. All analyses were conducted at the National Acoustic Laboratories, Sydney. The LTASS was similar for all languages although there were many statistically significant differences. Such differences were small and not always consistent for male and female samples of the same language. For one‐third octave bands of speech, the maximum short‐term rms level was 10 dB above the maximum long‐term rms level, consistent across languages and frequency. A ‘‘universal’’ LTASS is suggested as being applicable, across languages, for many purposes including use in hearing aid prescription procedures and in the Articulation Index.
Keyword: Children; Frequency-Response; Gain; Hearing-Aid; Intelligibility
URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:248872/UQ248872_OA.pdf
https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:248872
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10
Normal-hearing and hearing-impaired subjects' ability to just follow conversation in competing speech, reversed speech, and noise backgrounds
In: Journal of speech and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 35 (1992) 1, 208-215
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11
Visual evoked potentials : relation to adult speechreading and cognitive function
In: Journal of speech and hearing research. - Rockville, Md. : American Speech-Language-Hearing Association 32 (1989) 4, 725-735
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