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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur William M. Whitmer |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
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Article
Objective Hearing rehabilitation attempts to compensate for auditory dysfunction, reduce hearing difficulties and minimise participation restrictions that can lead to social isolation. However, there is no systematic approach to assess the qu[...]Article
Objectives: Current hearing aids have a limited bandwidth, which limits the intelligibility and quality of their output, and inhibits their uptake. Recent advances in signal processing, as well as novel methods of transduction, allow for a great[...]Article
Michael Richter, Auteur ; Tanveer Buhiyan, Auteur ; Lars Bramsløw, Auteur ; Hamish Innes-Brown, Auteur ; Lorenz Fiedler, Auteur ; Lauren V. Hadley, Auteur ; Graham Naylor, Auteur ; Gabrielle H. Saunders, Auteur ; Dorothea Wendt, Auteur ; William M. Whitmer, Auteur ; Adriana A. Zekveld, Auteur ; Sophia E. Kramer, Auteur |About one-third of all recently published studies on listening effort have used at least one physiological measure, providing evidence of the popularity of such measures in listening effort research. However, the specific measures employed, as w[...]Article
Objective: To form a normative set of responses to the GHABP questionnaire from a large regional dataset. Design: Participants were asked to rate their hearing disability, handicap, hearing-aid (HA) use, HA benefit, HA satisfaction, and residual[...]DisponibilitéExemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité International journal of audiology IJA. Vol.53, n°1-12 (January-December 2014) Périodique papier Ixelles Rez Consultation sur place uniquement
Exclu du prêtArticle
Objectives In the personalisation of hearing-aid fittings, gain is often adjusted to suit patient preferences using live speech. When using brief sentences as stimuli, the minimum gain adjustments necessary to elicit consistent preferences (pr[...]Article
Objectives Hearing-aid frequency-gain responses are routinely adjusted by clinicians to patient preferences and descriptions. This study measured the minimum gain adjustments required to elicit preferences, and the assignment of descriptors to [...]