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Improving Spatial Perception and Speech Understanding in Multitalker Mixtures

B

Boston University Charles River Campus

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Hearing Loss

Treatments

Other: hearing aid condition

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT05260307
4218E
R01DC015760 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to investigate several approaches for improving spatial perception and speech intelligibility in multitalker listening situations for hearing-aid users. The hypotheses are that spatial perception and speech intelligibility will be improved by (1) increased high-frequency audibility, (2) speech envelope enhancement, and/or (3) appropriate sound image externalization.

Full description

The purpose of this study is to investigate several approaches for improving spatial perception and speech intelligibility in multitalker listening situations for hearing-aid users. Aim 1 will investigate how well different amplification strategies provide access to the spectrotemporally sparse speech information that is available in multitalker mixtures. The hypothesis is that subtle differences in high-frequency audibility across different strategies may have much greater effects on the intelligibility of sparse speech than intact speech. This Aim will involve 40 subjects with hearing loss across 2 experiments. Aim 2 is an exploratory aim that will investigate the potential of a speech enhancement algorithm to improve spatial hearing in multitalker mixtures. The hypothesis is that speech enhancement, in addition to its established monaural benefits, will enhance the salience of interaural time differences and thus provide binaural benefits in multitalker mixtures. This Aim will involve 30 subjects with normal hearing and 60 subjects with hearing loss across 3 experiments. Aim 3 will investigate how different hearing-aid styles affect sound externalization. The hypothesis is that hearing aids can disrupt sound externalization, which in turn impacts speech intelligibility in multitalker mixtures. This Aim will involve 30 subjects with normal hearing and 60 subjects with hearing loss across 3 experiments.

This is a prospective design involving adult human subjects. While the investigators will recruit subjects with normal and impaired hearing, all subjects will be assigned to the same set of experimental conditions. Therefore, for the purposes of intervention (or prospective assignment), the subjects can be treated as a single group completing the same intervention (or set of interventions). The behavioral experiments involve listening to speech sounds (either unaided, with hearing aids, or with simulated hearing aids), and providing responses related to spatial perception or speech intelligibility. The order of experimental conditions will be randomized for each subject in order to control for order effects. All of the experimental tasks and outcome measures have been previously established, have good reliability and validity, and will be appropriate for informing future studies.

Enrollment

220 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria: Normal-Hearing Subjects

  • 18 to 35 years of age
  • Audiometric thresholds that do not exceed 20 dB HL at any frequency from 250 to 8000 Hz
  • Able to provide informed consent and understand experimental instructions
  • Normal or corrected-to-normal vision

Inclusion Criteria: Hearing-Impaired Subjects

  • 18 to 80 years of age
  • Documented sensorineural hearing loss
  • Able to provide informed consent and understand experimental instructions
  • Normal or corrected-to-normal vision

Exclusion Criteria (some experiments)

  • Non-native speakers of English

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

220 participants in 1 patient group

Experimental condition
Other group
Description:
Participants will be presented with sound stimuli under a number of experimental conditions that simulate different hearing-aid conditions.
Treatment:
Other: hearing aid condition

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Christine Mason; Virginia A Best, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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