2006
DOI: 10.1080/14992020500429583
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A Swedish version of the Hearing In Noise Test (HINT) for measurement of speech recognition

Abstract: A Swedish Hearing In Noise Test (HINT), consisting of everyday sentences to be used in an adaptive procedure to estimate the speech recognition thresholds in noise and quiet, has been developed. The material consists of 250 sentences, with a length of five to nine syllables, normalized for naturalness, difficulty and reliability. The sentences were recorded with a female speaker. From the sentences, 25 phonemically balanced lists were created. All lists fluctuate less than 1 dB of the overall mean. The standar… Show more

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Cited by 135 publications
(155 citation statements)
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“…The standard deviation of the SRT N across all lists and listeners is also similar for the different tests. The standard deviation amounts to 1.0 dB for the present test, 1.1 dB for the Canadian-French (Vaillancourt et al, 2005), 1.1 dB for the Swedish (Hällgren et al, 2006), and 1.7 dB for the Cantonese version (Wong & Soli, 2005). These standard deviations are dominated by the standard deviations within listeners, but are also influenced by the variation between the list-SRT N s (means across listeners).…”
Section: Comparison With Other Sentence Testsmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…The standard deviation of the SRT N across all lists and listeners is also similar for the different tests. The standard deviation amounts to 1.0 dB for the present test, 1.1 dB for the Canadian-French (Vaillancourt et al, 2005), 1.1 dB for the Swedish (Hällgren et al, 2006), and 1.7 dB for the Cantonese version (Wong & Soli, 2005). These standard deviations are dominated by the standard deviations within listeners, but are also influenced by the variation between the list-SRT N s (means across listeners).…”
Section: Comparison With Other Sentence Testsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The standard deviation (squares) has a minimum for sentences 4 and 5, but varies very little as a function of the sentence position. The result that sentence 4 is closer to the reference level than several of the following sentences was also found in the studies of Nilsson et al (1994) and Hällgren et al (2006). As a result, it was decided here to include the last eight levels (4 to 11) in the SRT N calculation.…”
Section: Calculation Of the Srt Nmentioning
confidence: 99%
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