Publication | Open Access
Methodological aspects of an adaptive multidirectional pattern search to optimize speech perception using three hearing-aid algorithms
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Citations
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References
2004
Year
Speech EnhancementAcoustic ModelingSpeech RecognitionPhoneticsNoiseRobust Speech RecognitionMethodological AspectsHealth SciencesSpeech PerceptionStep SizeAudiologyHearing-aid AlgorithmsStep Size ConstraintsSpeech CommunicationSpeech TechnologyHearing LossAdaptive Step SizeSpeech ProcessingArts
In this study we investigated the reliability and convergence characteristics of an adaptive multidirectional pattern search procedure, relative to a nonadaptive multidirectional pattern search procedure. The procedure was designed to optimize three speech-processing strategies. These comprise noise reduction, spectral enhancement, and spectral lift. The search is based on a paired-comparison paradigm, in which subjects evaluated the listening comfort of speech-in-noise fragments. The procedural and nonprocedural factors that influence the reliability and convergence of the procedure are studied using various test conditions. The test conditions combine different tests, initial settings, background noise types, and step size configurations. Seven normal hearing subjects participated in this study. The results indicate that the reliability of the optimization strategy may benefit from the use of an adaptive step size. Decreasing the step size increases accuracy, while increasing the step size can be beneficial to create clear perceptual differences in the comparisons. The reliability also depends on starting point, stop criterion, step size constraints, background noise, algorithms used, as well as the presence of drifting cues and suboptimal settings. There appears to be a trade-off between reliability and convergence, i.e., when the step size is enlarged the reliability improves, but the convergence deteriorates.
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