an update on hearing aid testing

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An Update on Hearing Aid Testing Reading Speech-Maps or SPLograms Niki Timar, Audiologist Vancouver Island Health Authority – South Island

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An Update on Hearing Aid Testing. Reading Speech-Maps or SPLograms Niki Timar, Audiologist Vancouver Island Health Authority – South Island. Background. Audiologists used to routinely test hearing aids in the booth, using aided audiograms. Background. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

An Update on Hearing Aid Testing

Reading Speech-Maps or SPLograms

Niki Timar, Audiologist

Vancouver Island Health Authority – South Island

Page 2: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Background

• Audiologists used to routinely test hearing aids in the booth, using aided audiograms

Page 3: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing
Page 4: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Background

• Research has shown aided audiograms are not a good way to test modern hearing aids

• BC Public Health is switching over to the newer way of testing, using Real-Ear or simulated Real-Ear measures

• This is why you might not be receiving aided audiograms recently

Page 5: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

What is a SpeechMap or SPLogram?

• A graph showing hearing thresholds, maximum safe or acceptable levels, and the performance of the hearing aid

• “Speechmap” is the proprietary term Audioscan uses for their software

• “SPLogram” is a term coined by Richard Seewald and his group, from the University of Western Ontario, for use with the Desired Sensation Level (DSL) hearing aid prescription formula

Page 6: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Audiogram on Speechmap Screen

Normal Hearing

“Speech Banana”

Hearing Thresholds

In dB Hearing Level (HL)

Page 7: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Speechmap or SPL-o-gram

In dB Sound Pressure Level (SPL)

Normal Hearing

“Speech Banana”

Hearing Thresholds

Page 8: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Soft

Loud

In dB

Sound Pressure Level

NOT Hearing Level

Difference Between Speechmap and Audiogram

Page 9: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Inaudible

Aided “Speech Banana”

Too Loud

Page 10: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Why Not Aided Audiograms?

• Aided audiograms only show one thing: the response of the hearing aid to very soft sounds

• Aided audiograms do not tell anything about how loud the hearing aid is, and whether it is potentially damaging to a child’s hearing

Page 11: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing
Page 12: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Real-Ear Testing

• Instead of Aided testing in the booth, we now rely on Real-Ear Testing as our main hearing aid test

Page 13: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

What is Real-Ear Testing?

• Real-Ear testing is objective testing with the hearing aid in the ear.

• Basically, we place a microphone in the ear just past the hearing aid, and measure what the actual output of the hearing aid is, close to the eardrum

                                                 

                                                         

Page 14: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing
Page 15: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Why the Changes in Methodology?

A Short Lesson on Hearing Aid Technology

Page 16: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Hearing Aids

• Hearing aids are now digital

• Hearing Aids are no longer linear, they use COMPRESSION

Page 17: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Dynamic Range

• One important concept for understanding compression and hearing aid function is DYNAMIC RANGE

• This is the range of usable hearing for a given individual – between the quietest sounds they can hear (hearing thresholds) and the loudest sounds they can tolerate (loudness discomfort levels)

Page 18: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Dynamic Range

Hearing Thresholds

Maximum Output

HL

Page 19: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Hearing Thresholds

Dynamic Range

Maximum Output SPL

Page 20: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Linear Hearing Aids

• Until the 1980’s, hearing aids were linear

• They added the same amount of amplification, no matter how loud the input sound

Page 21: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Linear Amplification

• 140

• 120

• 100

• 80

• 60

• 40

• 20

Page 22: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Peak Clipping

• 140 dB is dangerously loud for most people

• To keep the sound levels safe, hearing aids used Peak Clipping – they just stopped at a given level – for example, they wouldn’t make anything louder than 120 dB

• This caused DISTORTION in the hearing aids

Page 23: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Peak Clipping

• 140

• 120

• 100

• 80

• 60

• 40

• 20

Page 24: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Compression

• In the 1980s, as a way to keep sounds comfortable but undistorted, manufacturers started using compression limiting

• Instead of amplifying the same amount no matter what the input, for sounds approaching the limit, less amplification would be used

Page 25: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Compression

• 140

• 120

• 100

• 80

• 60

• 40

• 20

Page 26: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Even Newer Advances

• As technology advanced, it became possible to have different compression levels for different frequency ranges, and for different intensities

• This is where digital hearing aids shine, as more capability can be added in these functions, without adding size or battery drain

Page 27: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

So What Does This Have to Do With Speechmap?

• Testing just quiet sounds in the booth does not tell us about what the hearing aid does to speech

• Digital hearing aids often have noise suppression, which makes quiet, non-speech-like sounds even quieter, to avoid amplifying annoying sounds like fridges humming

• Aided audiograms are tested using quiet, non-speech-like sounds (tones)

Page 28: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing
Page 29: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

Limitation of Aided Audiogram

• This slide shows the hearing aid’s response to quiet non-speech tones

• We can infer how much speech the child can hear, but it does not show differing performance for soft, versus loud, speech

• It does not tell us if the hearing aid is too loud, or if there is distortion

• There are no targets, so we don’t know if this is a “good” fitting

Page 30: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing
Page 31: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

• The Speechmap shows soft speech, loud speech and very loud sounds, showing, in this case, that they all give acceptable responses

• It also shows Speech Intelligibility Index (SII), which predicts how much of the speech signal is audible for a given input

Page 32: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

• You may also see Speechmap tables, depending how your local audiologist likes to look at things:

Page 33: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing
Page 34: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing

• The Speechmap shows clearly the limitations of what can be achieved with hearing aids for difficult fittings

• This keeps us from trying to increase the volume where it does not help, and would only cause feedback problems

Page 35: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing
Page 36: An Update on  Hearing Aid Testing