The effect of speech and noise levels on the quality perceived by cochlear implant and normal hearing listeners
Sara Akbarzadeh, Sungmin Lee, Fei Chen, Chin-Tuan Tan

TL;DR
This study investigates how speech and noise levels, noise types, and noise reduction algorithms affect speech quality perception in cochlear implant and normal hearing listeners, revealing differences in sensitivity and perception patterns.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how CI and NH listeners perceive speech quality under various noise conditions and the impact of speech/noise levels and noise reduction algorithms.
Findings
CI listeners are less sensitive to noise reduction distortions.
Speech level significantly affects perceived quality differently for CI and NH listeners.
Perception patterns vary between CI and NH listeners in complex noise environments.
Abstract
Electrical hearing by cochlear implants (CIs) may be fundamentally different from acoustic hearing by normal-hearing (NH) listeners, presumably showing unequal speech quality perception in various noise environments. Noise reduction (NR) algorithms used in CI reduce the noise in favor of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), regardless of plausible accompanying distortions that may degrade the speech quality perception. To gain better understanding of CI speech quality perception, the present work aimed investigating speech quality perception in a diverse noise conditions, including factors of speech/noise levels, type of noise, and distortions caused by NR models. Fifteen NH and seven CI subjects participated in this study. Speech sentences were set to two different levels (65 and 75 dB SPL). Two types of noise (Cafeteria and Babble) at three levels (55, 65, and 75 dB SPL) were used. Sentences…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation · Speech and Audio Processing · Acoustic Wave Phenomena Research
