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Research Article

Prescribed real-ear and achieved real-life differences in children's hearing aids adjusted according to the NAL-NL1 and the DSL v.4.1 prescriptions

, , , , &
Pages S16-S25 | Received 24 Nov 2008, Accepted 27 Jun 2009, Published online: 29 Jan 2010
 

Abstract

Abstract

This paper examined how hearing aids adjusted for comparing NAL-NL1 with DSLv.4.1 prescription formulas matched prescriptive targets. The real-ear-to-coupler differences (RECD) of 48 children (24 in Australia and 24 in Canada) were measured and used to derive coupler gain targets. Verification of gain and output were carried out in an HA2-2cc coupler. Electroacoustic measurements revealed a minimal difference between NAL-NL1 and DSLv.4.1 frequency-response slopes due to practical limitations of the devices, even though the prescribed differences were large (up to 13 dB/octave). The difference in overall gain was generally achieved in the hearing aids, with DSLv.4.1 prescribing higher overall gain than NAL-NL1. The mean RECD at 4 kHz was 5 dB higher for children in Australia than in Canada. As the same RECDs were used in deriving targets for both prescriptions, this is unlikely to affect the results of the comparison. The impact of a gain difference between prescriptions on children's performance and preferences in real life is reported in separate papers.

Sumario

Este trabajo examinó cómo los auxiliares auditivos ajustados para comparar las recetas NAL-NL1 y DSLv.4.1 se ajustaron a las metas de prescripción. Se midieron las diferencias de oído-real a acoplador (RECD) de 48 niños (24 de Australia y 24 de Canadá), y se utilizaron para derivar las metas de ganancia por acoplador. La verificación de la ganancia y la salida se realizó en un acoplador HA2-2cc. Las mediciones electroacústicas revelaron una diferencia mínima entre las curvas de respuesta frecuencial de la NAL-NL1 y la SDLv.4.1, debido a limitaciones prácticas de los dispositivos, aunque las diferencias de prescripción eran grandes (hasta de 13 dB/octava). La diferencia en ganancia global fue generalmente lograda en los auxiliares auditivos, con el DSLv-4.1 indicando una ganancia global más alta que la del NAL-NL1. La RECD a 4 kHz fue 5 dB más alta para los niños de Australia que para los de Canadá. Dado que se usaron los mismas RECD para derivar las metas en ambas recetas, es improbable que éstas afecten los resultados de la comparación. El impacto de la diferencia de ganancia entre las recetas, para el desempeño de los niños y sus preferencias en la vida real se reporta en trabajos separados.

Acknowledgements

This study was supported by the Oticon Foundation. We gratefully thank all children and their families for participation in this study.

Declaration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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