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Original Article

The French digit triplet test: A hearing screening tool for speech intelligibility in noise

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Pages 378-387 | Received 05 May 2009, Accepted 21 Oct 2009, Published online: 12 Apr 2010
 

Abstract

Abstract

A French speech intelligibility screening test in noise that applies digit triplets as stimuli has been developed and evaluated for both telephone and broadband headphone use. After optimizing the speech material based on the intelligibility of the individual digits, norms for normal-hearing subjects were established. speech reception thresholds (SRTs) of −6.4 ± 0.4 and −10.5 ± 0.3 dB SNR, and slopes of 17.1 and 27.1 %/dB were obtained for telephone and broadband headphone presentation, respectively. The French digit triplet test by telephone was then implemented as an automatic self-screening test by home telephone, and further evaluated in normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners. A test-retest variability of 0.7 dB was found and the correlation between SRT and pure-tone average (PTA0.5,1,2,4) was 0.77. One month after launching the test, 20 000 calls were registered. It can be concluded that both versions of the newly developed test have steep slopes and small SRT differences across normal-hearing listeners. The screening test by telephone is highly reliable and proves to fulfill the need for an easily accessible and objective hearing screening.

Sumario

Se desarrolló y evaluó una prueba de tamiz de inteligibilidad del lenguaje en ruido, utilizando ternas de dígitos como estímulo, tanto para teléfono como para auriculares de banda ancha. Después de optimizar el material lingüístico basado en la inteligibilidad de los dígitos individuales, se establecieron las normas para los sujetos normoyentes. Se obtuvieron umbrales de recepción del lenguaje (SRTs) de -6.4 ± 0.4 y -10.5 ± 0.3dB SNR y pendientes de 17.1 y 27.1%/dB para teléfono y auriculares de banda ancha, respectivamente. Se implementó la prueba de terna de dígitos en francés por teléfono como una prueba de tamiz autoaplicable por teléfono en casa y después se evaluó en normoyentes e hipoacúsicos. Se encontró una variabilidad de test-re-test de 0.7 dB y la correlación entre SRT y el promedio de tonos puros (PTA0.5,1,2,4) fue de 0.77. Un mes después de lanzar la prueba, se registraron 20,000 llamadas. Se puede concluir que ambas versiones de la prueba recientemente desarrollada tiene pendientes pronunciadas y pequeñas diferencias del SRT entre los normoyentes. La prueba de tamiz por teléfono es altamente confiable y demuestra que satisface las necesidades de una prueba de tamiz auditivo fácil, accesible y objetiva.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Ellen Boon and Celine Jacobs for administering the optimization measurements. Daniel Berg, Michael Buschermöhle, and Birger Kollmeier are gratefully acknowledged for their technical and methodological support. Our thanks go to the association France Presbyacousie for financing the implementation of the digit triplet screening test by telephone, to Jens Kofoed for the technical realization, and to Emilie Vormès for performing the measurements at the ENT department of Hôpital Avicenne. We thank Marcel Vlaming for the first contacts with France Presbyacousie, and for his excellent HearCom management. This research was supported by a grant from the European Union FP6, Project 004171 HEARCOM.

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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