Ph.D.
Defense for Mr. Ikaro Silva
Thesis Title: Objective estimation of loudness growth using tone burst evoked
auditory responses
Date: Tuesday June 2, 2009
Time: 1 PM
Location: 442 Dana
Abstract:
Human perception of loudness as
function of a wide range of stimulus intensity is hypothesized to vary in
complex ways that cannot be accounted for simply by the listener’s threshold
and discomfort level. The ability to estimate loudness growth as function of
stimulus intensity using an objective procedure could potentially allow for customized
on-linear hearing aid fitting for patients unable to perform standard
subjective auditory tests. Some researchers have investigated the feasibility
of using evoked auditory brainstem responses (ABR) and otoacoustic
emissions (OAE) as physiological predictors of loudness growth in humans.
Results from OAE studies were promising, but lacked an investigation into the
selection of its parameters and a measure of the methodological performance in
hearing impaired listeners. Previous studies using ABR, on the other hand, did
not use frequency specific stimuli and were based on subjective segmentation
techniques that did not take into account the residual noise levels in the
averaged waveform. The work in this thesis aims at investigating and improving
the use of simultaneously recorded tone burst OAE and ABR for assessing frequency
specific loudness growth in normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners.
First, an optimal set of parameters for the OAE estimator is selected based on
mean square error criteria. Second, a new signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR)
estimation procedure is developed that attempts to take into account
non-stationary noise sources present in ABR recordings. Third, several objective
ABR segmentation and noise control procedures are tested for estimating
loudness growth. Additionally, SNR estimates are compared with ABR loudness
growth estimation errors in an attempt to examine dependencies between residual
noise levels in averaged ABR waveforms and estimation performance.
Results show that for normal listeners and with 1 kHz tone bursts, both OAE and
ABR loudness growth estimators can perform within range of standard psycho acoustical
procedures. With hearing impaired listeners, or with 4 kHz tone bursts, the
performance of the OAE estimator produced a higher mean-square error with
respect to a psycho acoustical measure of loudness than most of the ABR
estimators. The performance of ABR estimators with hearing-impaired listeners
is close to, but not as accurate as the standard psycho acoustical procedures.
Thesis advisor: Michael J. Epstein, Ph.D.