Performance on tests of pure‐tone thresholds, speech‐recognition thresholds, and speech‐recognition scores for the two ears of each subject were evaluated in two groups of adults with bilateral hearing losses. One group was composed of individuals fitted with binaural hearing aids, and the other group included persons with monaural hearing aids. Performance prior to the use of hearing aids was compared to performance after 4–5 years of hearing aid use in order to determine whether the unaided ear would show effects of auditory deprivation. There were no differences over time for pure‐tone thresholds or speech‐recognition thresholds for both ears of both groups. Nevertheless, the results revealed that the speech‐recognition difference scores of the binaurally fitted subjects remained stable over time whereas they increased for the monaurally fitted subjects. The findings reveal an auditory deprivation effect for the unfitted ears of the subjects with monaural hearing aids.
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November 1984
November 01 1984
Late‐onset auditory deprivation: Effects of monaural versus binaural hearing aids
Shlomo Silman;
Shlomo Silman
Department of Speech, Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, Brooklyn, New York 11210 and Audiology and Speech Pathology Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center, East Orange, New Jersey 07019
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Stanley A. Gelfand;
Stanley A. Gelfand
Audiology and Speech Pathology Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center, East Orange, New Jersey 07019
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Carol Ann Silverman
Carol Ann Silverman
Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, Marymount Manhattan College, New York, New York 10021
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J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 76, 1357–1362 (1984)
Article history
Received:
March 09 1984
Accepted:
May 21 1984
Citation
Shlomo Silman, Stanley A. Gelfand, Carol Ann Silverman; Late‐onset auditory deprivation: Effects of monaural versus binaural hearing aids. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 November 1984; 76 (5): 1357–1362. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.391451
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