Abstract
Objective
To gather preliminary reference data on older normal-hearing (NH) adults for the refined Tracking of Noise Tolerance (TNT) test.
Design
Within-subject repeated measures. Participants were tested on the TNT in the sound-field and under headphones. In the sound-field, speech stimuli were presented at 75 dB SPL and 82 dB SPL from 0° with a speech-shaped noise presented either from 0° or 180° at a level controlled by the participants. The order of signal level, mode of presentation, noise azimuth, and TNT passages were counterbalanced across listeners. Testing was repeated for one condition after 1–3 weeks to estimate within-session and between-session reliability.
Study sample
Twenty-five NH listeners (51–82 yrs of age).
Results
Mean TNT scores (TNTAve) were about 4 dB at a speech input of 75 dB SPL and 3 dB at 82 dB SPL. The TNTAve was similar between the headphone and sound-field presentations in the co-located noise. TNTAve scores measured with noise-back were about 1 dB better than those measured from the front. The 95% confidence intervals of absolute test-retest differences were about 1.2 dB within-session and 2.0 dB between sessions.
Conclusions
The refined TNT may be a reliable tool to measure noise acceptance and subjective speech intelligibility.
Acknowledgements
All the authors are employees of WS Audiology.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).