K. Laitakari, SPEECH RECOGNITION IN NOISE - DEVELOPMENT OF A COMPUTERIZED TEST AND PREPARATION OF TEST MATERIAL, Scandinavian audiology, 25(1), 1996, pp. 29-34
An adaptable, Finnish language, ''speech in noise'' test was developed
using a personal computer equipped with a sound card. Each of the 100
0 test items stored as a separate digitized wave form file on the hard
disk of a personal computer consisted of disyllabic words on one ster
eo track and synchronized speech noise on the other. Because only a fe
w randomly selected words are presented in this test for SRTN (speech
recognition threshold in noise or S/N ratio corresponding to 50% recog
nition) the selection and equalization of test material is considered
to be crucial to the achievement of reproducible results in short time
. Equalization of the test items (word + noise) in accordance with deg
ree of difficulty, by adapting the noise signal to the properties of t
he corresponding word, and selection of 510 of the initial 1000 record
ings with the smallest SDs are described. The effect of this procedure
on the test-retest reliability of testing SRTN is evaluated. Despite
contrary expectations, the procedure appears to have no effect on the
reliability of the speech recognition threshold in noise (so from 1.5
to 1.7 dB).