Abstract
Upward Spread of Masking in Normal and Impaired Ears
Upward spread of masking was studied for normals and sensorineurally hearing-impaired subjects with high-frequency hearing loss. Hearing-impaired listeners were recruited in such a way as to present normal hearing on the frequency of the masker, that is a narrow band of noise centered at 1 000 Hz. Levels of the masker were set at 70, 80 and 90 dB, respectively. Results first indicated the presence of a relationship between masked and elevated absolute thresholds for a masker level of 70 dB. At masker levels of 80 and 90 dB, hearing-impaired listeners showed excessive upward spread of masking in spite of normal hearing sensitivity at the masker frequency: with 80 and 90 dB of noise, upward spread of masking grew, respectively, 2.6 and 1.6 times faster than in normals. Furthermore, excessive upward spread of masking was shown to progress as a function of hearing loss. Results were interpreted as additional evidence of abnormal frequency selectivity in sensorineurally hearing-impaired listeners.