Frequency lowering is a form of signal processing designed to deliver high-frequency speech cues to the residual hearing region of a listener with a high-frequency hearing loss. While this processing technique has been shown to improve the intelligibility of fricative and affricate consonants, perception of place of articulation has remained a challenge for hearing-impaired listeners, especially when the bandwidth of the speech signal is reduced during the frequency-lowering processing. This paper describes a modified vocoder-based frequency-lowering system similar to one reported by Posen, Reed, and Braida (1993), with the goal of improving place-of-articulation perception by enhancing the spectral differences of fricative consonants. In this system, frequency lowering is conditional; it suppresses the processing whenever the high-frequency portion (>400 Hz) of the speech signal is a periodic signal. In addition, the system separates non-sonorant consonants into three classes based on the spectral information (slope and peak location) of fricative consonants. Results from a group of normal-hearing listeners with our modified system show improved perception of frication and affrication features, as well as place-of-articulation distinction, without degrading the perception of nasals and semivowels compared to low-pass filtering and Posen et al.'s system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.specom.2011.07.008 | DOI Listing |
Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol
October 2021
Department of Adult and Development Age Human Pathology "Gaetano Barresi", Unit of Otorhinolaryngology, University of Messina, Via Consolare Valeria 1, 98125, Messina, ME, Italy.
Objective: Modern hearing aids use various signal-processing strategies to improve speech intelligibility. In this manuscript, we studied the linear frequency transposition (LFT), a frequency-lowering algorithm, in patients with age-related hearing loss. Frequency-lowering algorithms transpose high-frequency sounds to a lower-frequency band.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Although guidelines for fitting hearing aids for children are well developed and have strong basis in evidence, specific protocols for fitting and verifying technologies can supplement such guidelines. One such technology is frequency-lowering signal processing. Children require access to a broad bandwidth of speech to detect and use all phonemes including female /s/.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Audiol
February 2015
Boys Town National Research Hospital, Lincoln, NE.
Background: For the last decade, the importance of providing amplification up to 9-10 kHz has been supported by multiple studies involving children and adults. The extent to which a listener with hearing loss can benefit from bandwidth expansion is dependent on the audibility of high-frequency cues. The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) devised a standard method for measuring and reporting hearing aid bandwidth for quality-control purposes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEar Hear
November 2013
Department of Speech Language Pathology and Audiology, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Objectives: This study describes a vocoder-based frequency-lowering system that enhances spectral cues for nonsonorant consonants differing in place of articulation. The goal of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of this system for speech recognition by hearing-impaired listeners.
Design: Experiment 1 evaluated fricative consonant recognition in quiet.
Speech Commun
January 2012
Department of Speech Language Pathology & Audiology, 106A Forsyth Building, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Frequency lowering is a form of signal processing designed to deliver high-frequency speech cues to the residual hearing region of a listener with a high-frequency hearing loss. While this processing technique has been shown to improve the intelligibility of fricative and affricate consonants, perception of place of articulation has remained a challenge for hearing-impaired listeners, especially when the bandwidth of the speech signal is reduced during the frequency-lowering processing. This paper describes a modified vocoder-based frequency-lowering system similar to one reported by Posen, Reed, and Braida (1993), with the goal of improving place-of-articulation perception by enhancing the spectral differences of fricative consonants.
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