Abstract
Fifty subjects with mild to moderate-severe sensorineural hearing loss and prior experience
with binaural amplification were evaluated at two sites (25 subjects at each site).
Signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) were measured using the Hearing in Noise Test (HINT)
after each subject wore binaural in-the-ear hearing aids programmed for omnidirectional
and dual-microphone performance, for 4 weeks. Both microphone conditions were evaluated
under "ideal" (signal at 0°; noise at 180°) and "diffuse" (signal at 0°; correlated
noise at 45°, 135°, 225°, and 315°) listening conditions. Results revealed statistically
significant mean improvements in SNRs between 3.7 and 3.5 dB at Site I and 3.2 and
2.7 dB at Site II for the ideal and diffuse listening conditions, respectively, for
the dual-microphones in comparison to the performance provided by the omnidirectional
microphone.
Abbreviations: Dl = directivity index, HINT = Hearing in Noise Test, NAL-R = National Acoustic Laboratory-Revised,
REIG = real-ear insertion gain, SAV = select-a-vent, SC+aRT = super compression with
adaptive release time
Key Words
Diffuse - dual-microphone - HINT thresholds - ideal - omnidirectional - signal-to-noise
ratio - super compression with adaptive release time