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Papers by Lorraine Delhorne

Research paper thumbnail of A Study of the Combined Use of a Hearing Aid and Tactual Aid in an Adult with Profound Hearing Loss

Research paper thumbnail of Training Spatial Knowledge Acquisition Using Virtual Environments

Research paper thumbnail of A non-linear efferent-inspired model of the auditory system; matching human confusions in stationary noise

Speech Communication, Aug 1, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Analytic study of the Tadoma method : improving performance through the use of supplementary tactual displays

Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, May 1, 1992

Although results obtained with the Tadoma method of speechreading have set a new standard for tac... more Although results obtained with the Tadoma method of speechreading have set a new standard for tactual speech communication, they are nevertheless inferior to those obtained in the normal auditory domain. Speech reception through Tadoma is comparable to that of normal-hearing subjects listening to speech under adverse conditions corresponding to a speech-to-noise ratio of roughly 0 dB. The goal of the current study was to demonstrate improvements to speech reception through Tadoma through the use of supplementary tactual information, thus leading to a new standard of performance in the tactual domain. Three supplementary tactual displays were investigated: (a) an articulatory-based display of tongue contact with the hard palate; (b) a multichannel display of the short-term speech spectrum; and (c) tactual reception of Cued Speech. The ability of laboratory-trained subjects to discriminate pairs of speech segments that are highly confused through Tadoma was studied for each of these augmental displays. Generally, discrimination tests were conducted for Tadoma alone, the supplementary display alone, and Tadoma combined with the supplementary tactual display. The results indicated that the tongue-palate contact display was an effective supplement to Tadoma for improving discrimination of consonants, but that neither the tongue-palate contact display nor the short-term spectral display was highly effective in improving vowel discriminability. For both vowel and consonant stimulus pairs, discriminability was nearly perfect for the tactual reception of the manual cues associated with Cued Speech. Further experiments on the identification of speech segments were conducted for Tadoma combined with Cued Speech. The observed data for both discrimination and identification experiments are compared with the predictions of models of integration of information from separate sources.

Research paper thumbnail of Sound processing for cochlear implants

2001 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing. Proceedings (Cat. No.01CH37221), 2000

ABSTRACT Cochlear implants are devices designed to provide a measure of hearing to the deaf. Most... more ABSTRACT Cochlear implants are devices designed to provide a measure of hearing to the deaf. Most deaf individuals have lost the ability to translate sound into the patterns of electric activity normally present on the 30000 fibers of the auditory nerve. Because these patterns of activity are the inputs to the brain that result in sound sensation, cochlear implants deliver electric stimuli to these fibers in an attempt to artificially elicit patterns of spike activity that mimic the patterns present in a normal-hearing ear. We introduce cochlear implants by describing the signal processing used by current devices. Measurements of patient performance in quiet and in noise are used to demonstrate the limitations of today's devices and to introduce the avenues of current research that show promise for improving the performance of these devices

Research paper thumbnail of Tactile reception of fingerspelling and sign language

Research paper thumbnail of A Single-Band Envelope Cue as a Supplement to Speechreading of Segmentals: A Comparison of Auditory versus Tactual Presentation

Ear and Hearing, 2001

The objective of this study was to compare the effects of a single-band envelope cue as a supplem... more The objective of this study was to compare the effects of a single-band envelope cue as a supplement to speechreading of segmentals and sentences when presented through either the auditory or tactual modality. The supplementary signal, which consisted of a 200-Hz carrier amplitude-modulated by the envelope of an octave band of speech centered at 500 Hz, was presented through a high-performance single-channel vibrator for tactual stimulation or through headphones for auditory stimulation. Normal-hearing subjects were trained and tested on the identification of a set of 16 medial vowels in /b/-V-/d/ context and a set of 24 initial consonants in C-/a/-C context under five conditions: speechreading alone (S), auditory supplement alone (A), tactual supplement alone (T), speechreading combined with the auditory supplement (S+A), and speechreading combined with the tactual supplement (S+T). Performance on various speech features was examined to determine the contribution of different features toward improvements under the aided conditions for each modality. Performance on the combined conditions (S+A and S+T) was compared with predictions generated from a quantitative model of multi-modal performance. To explore the relationship between benefits for segmentals and for connected speech within the same subjects, sentence reception was also examined for the three conditions of S, S+A, and S+T. For segmentals, performance generally followed the pattern of T < A < S < S+T < S+A. Significant improvements to speechreading were observed with both the tactual and auditory supplements for consonants (10 and 23 percentage-point improvements, respectively), but only with the auditory supplement for vowels (a 10 percentage-point improvement). The results of the feature analyses indicated that improvements to speechreading arose primarily from improved performance on the features low and tense for vowels and on the features voicing, nasality, and plosion for consonants. These improvements were greater for auditory relative to tactual presentation. When predicted percent-correct scores for the multi-modal conditions were compared with observed scores, the predicted values always exceeded observed values and the predictions were somewhat more accurate for the S+A than for the S+T conditions. For sentences, significant improvements to speechreading were observed with both the auditory and tactual supplements for high-context materials but again only with the auditory supplement for low-context materials. The tactual supplement provided a relative gain to speechreading of roughly 25% for all materials except low-context sentences (where gain was only 10%), whereas the auditory supplement provided relative gains of roughly 50% (for vowels, consonants, and low-context sentences) to 75% (for high-context sentences). The envelope cue provides a significant benefit to the speechreading of consonant segments when presented through either the auditory or tactual modality and of vowel segments through audition only. These benefits were found to be related to the reception of the same types of features under both modalities (voicing, manner, and plosion for consonants and low and tense for vowels); however, benefits were larger for auditory compared with tactual presentation. The benefits observed for segmentals appear to carry over into benefits for sentence reception under both modalities.

Research paper thumbnail of 50 Tibial bone density loss in spinal cord injured patients : Effects of FES exercise

Research paper thumbnail of Tactile Communication of Speech

Research paper thumbnail of Research on tactual communication of speech: Ideas, issues, and findings

The Volta review

... Reed, Charlotte M.; Durlach, Nathaniel I.; Delhorne, Lorraine A.; Rabinowitz, William M.; et ... more ... Reed, Charlotte M.; Durlach, Nathaniel I.; Delhorne, Lorraine A.; Rabinowitz, William M.; et al. The Volta Review, Vol 91(5), Sep 1989, 65-78. Abstract. ... 2010 American Psychological Association | PDF documents require Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Research paper thumbnail of 1. LABORATORY EVALUATION OF FEEDBACK REDUCTION ALGORITHMS Three adaptive feedback reduction algorithms plus a reference algorithm were implemented in a laboratory- based digital hearing aid system and evaluated with dynamic feedback paths and hearing-impaired subjects. The evaluation included mea...

Research paper thumbnail of Tactual Cued Speech as a Supplement to Speechreading

Research paper thumbnail of Current Results of a Field Study of Adult Users of Tactile Aids

Seminars in Hearing, 1995

Research paper thumbnail of Two-microphone spatial filtering provides speech reception benefits for cochlear implant users in difficult acoustic environments

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2014

This article introduces and provides an assessment of a spatial-filtering algorithm based on two ... more This article introduces and provides an assessment of a spatial-filtering algorithm based on two closely-spaced (∼1 cm) microphones in a behind-the-ear shell. The evaluated spatial-filtering algorithm used fast (∼10 ms) temporal-spectral analysis to determine the location of incoming sounds and to enhance sounds arriving from straight ahead of the listener. Speech reception thresholds (SRTs) were measured for eight cochlear implant (CI) users using consonant and vowel materials under three processing conditions: An omni-directional response, a dipole-directional response, and the spatial-filtering algorithm. The background noise condition used three simultaneous time-reversed speech signals as interferers located at 90°, 180°, and 270°. Results indicated that the spatial-filtering algorithm can provide speech reception benefits of 5.8 to 10.7 dB SRT compared to an omni-directional response in a reverberant room with multiple noise sources. Given the observed SRT benefits, coupled wi...

Research paper thumbnail of Auditory-filter characteristics for listeners with real and simulated hearing impairment

Trends in amplification, 2012

Functional simulation of sensorineural hearing impairment is an important research tool that can ... more Functional simulation of sensorineural hearing impairment is an important research tool that can elucidate the nature of hearing impairments and suggest or eliminate compensatory signal-processing schemes. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the capability of an audibility-based functional simulation of hearing loss to reproduce the auditory-filter characteristics of listeners with sensorineural hearing loss. The hearing-loss simulation used either threshold-elevating noise alone or a combination of threshold-elevating noise and multiband expansion to reproduce the audibility-based characteristics of the loss (including detection thresholds, dynamic range, and loudness recruitment). The hearing losses of 10 listeners with bilateral, mild-to-severe hearing loss were simulated in 10 corresponding groups of 3 age-matched normal-hearing listeners. Frequency selectivity was measured using a notched-noise masking paradigm at five probe frequencies in the range of 250 to 400...

Research paper thumbnail of A study of the tactual and visual reception of fingerspelling

Journal of speech and hearing research, 1990

A method of communication in frequent use among members of the deaf-blind community is the tactua... more A method of communication in frequent use among members of the deaf-blind community is the tactual reception of fingerspelling. In this method, the hand of the deaf-blind individual is placed on the hand of the sender to monitor the handshapes and movements associated with the letters of the manual alphabet. The purpose of the current study was to examine the ability of experienced deaf-blind subjects to receive fingerspelled materials, including sentences and connected text, through the tactual sense. A parallel study of the reception of fingerspelling through the visual sense was also conducted using sighted deaf subjects. For both visual and tactual reception of fingerspelled sentences, accuracy of reception was examined as a function of rate of presentation. In the tactual study, where rates were limited to those that could be produced naturally by an experienced interpreter, highly accurate reception of conversational sentence materials was observed throughout the range of natu...

Research paper thumbnail of Psychoacoustic and Phoneme Identification Measures in Cochlear-Implant and Normal-Hearing Listeners

Trends in Amplification, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Auditory Perception and Cognition

Research paper thumbnail of Otoacoustic-emission-based medial-olivocochlear reflex assays for humans

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Effects of Rate of Presentation on the Reception of American Sign Language

Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research, 1999

Previous research on the visual reception of fingerspelled English suggests that communication ra... more Previous research on the visual reception of fingerspelled English suggests that communication rates are limited primarily by constraints on production. Studies of artificially accelerated fingerspelling indicate that reception of fingerspelled sentences is highly accurate for rates up to 2 to 3 times those that can be produced naturally. The current paper reports on the results of a comparable study of the reception of American Sign Language (ASL). Fourteen native deaf ASL signers participated in an experiment in which videotaped productions of isolated ASL signs or ASL sentences were presented at normal playback speed and at speeds of 2, 3, 4, and 6 times normal speed. For isolated signs, identification scores decreased from 95% correct to 46% correct across the range of rates that were tested; for sentences, the ability to identify key signs decreased from 88% to 19% over the range of rates tested. The results indicate a breakdown in processing at around 2.5–3 times the normal ra...

Research paper thumbnail of A Study of the Combined Use of a Hearing Aid and Tactual Aid in an Adult with Profound Hearing Loss

Research paper thumbnail of Training Spatial Knowledge Acquisition Using Virtual Environments

Research paper thumbnail of A non-linear efferent-inspired model of the auditory system; matching human confusions in stationary noise

Speech Communication, Aug 1, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Analytic study of the Tadoma method : improving performance through the use of supplementary tactual displays

Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, May 1, 1992

Although results obtained with the Tadoma method of speechreading have set a new standard for tac... more Although results obtained with the Tadoma method of speechreading have set a new standard for tactual speech communication, they are nevertheless inferior to those obtained in the normal auditory domain. Speech reception through Tadoma is comparable to that of normal-hearing subjects listening to speech under adverse conditions corresponding to a speech-to-noise ratio of roughly 0 dB. The goal of the current study was to demonstrate improvements to speech reception through Tadoma through the use of supplementary tactual information, thus leading to a new standard of performance in the tactual domain. Three supplementary tactual displays were investigated: (a) an articulatory-based display of tongue contact with the hard palate; (b) a multichannel display of the short-term speech spectrum; and (c) tactual reception of Cued Speech. The ability of laboratory-trained subjects to discriminate pairs of speech segments that are highly confused through Tadoma was studied for each of these augmental displays. Generally, discrimination tests were conducted for Tadoma alone, the supplementary display alone, and Tadoma combined with the supplementary tactual display. The results indicated that the tongue-palate contact display was an effective supplement to Tadoma for improving discrimination of consonants, but that neither the tongue-palate contact display nor the short-term spectral display was highly effective in improving vowel discriminability. For both vowel and consonant stimulus pairs, discriminability was nearly perfect for the tactual reception of the manual cues associated with Cued Speech. Further experiments on the identification of speech segments were conducted for Tadoma combined with Cued Speech. The observed data for both discrimination and identification experiments are compared with the predictions of models of integration of information from separate sources.

Research paper thumbnail of Sound processing for cochlear implants

2001 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing. Proceedings (Cat. No.01CH37221), 2000

ABSTRACT Cochlear implants are devices designed to provide a measure of hearing to the deaf. Most... more ABSTRACT Cochlear implants are devices designed to provide a measure of hearing to the deaf. Most deaf individuals have lost the ability to translate sound into the patterns of electric activity normally present on the 30000 fibers of the auditory nerve. Because these patterns of activity are the inputs to the brain that result in sound sensation, cochlear implants deliver electric stimuli to these fibers in an attempt to artificially elicit patterns of spike activity that mimic the patterns present in a normal-hearing ear. We introduce cochlear implants by describing the signal processing used by current devices. Measurements of patient performance in quiet and in noise are used to demonstrate the limitations of today's devices and to introduce the avenues of current research that show promise for improving the performance of these devices

Research paper thumbnail of Tactile reception of fingerspelling and sign language

Research paper thumbnail of A Single-Band Envelope Cue as a Supplement to Speechreading of Segmentals: A Comparison of Auditory versus Tactual Presentation

Ear and Hearing, 2001

The objective of this study was to compare the effects of a single-band envelope cue as a supplem... more The objective of this study was to compare the effects of a single-band envelope cue as a supplement to speechreading of segmentals and sentences when presented through either the auditory or tactual modality. The supplementary signal, which consisted of a 200-Hz carrier amplitude-modulated by the envelope of an octave band of speech centered at 500 Hz, was presented through a high-performance single-channel vibrator for tactual stimulation or through headphones for auditory stimulation. Normal-hearing subjects were trained and tested on the identification of a set of 16 medial vowels in /b/-V-/d/ context and a set of 24 initial consonants in C-/a/-C context under five conditions: speechreading alone (S), auditory supplement alone (A), tactual supplement alone (T), speechreading combined with the auditory supplement (S+A), and speechreading combined with the tactual supplement (S+T). Performance on various speech features was examined to determine the contribution of different features toward improvements under the aided conditions for each modality. Performance on the combined conditions (S+A and S+T) was compared with predictions generated from a quantitative model of multi-modal performance. To explore the relationship between benefits for segmentals and for connected speech within the same subjects, sentence reception was also examined for the three conditions of S, S+A, and S+T. For segmentals, performance generally followed the pattern of T < A < S < S+T < S+A. Significant improvements to speechreading were observed with both the tactual and auditory supplements for consonants (10 and 23 percentage-point improvements, respectively), but only with the auditory supplement for vowels (a 10 percentage-point improvement). The results of the feature analyses indicated that improvements to speechreading arose primarily from improved performance on the features low and tense for vowels and on the features voicing, nasality, and plosion for consonants. These improvements were greater for auditory relative to tactual presentation. When predicted percent-correct scores for the multi-modal conditions were compared with observed scores, the predicted values always exceeded observed values and the predictions were somewhat more accurate for the S+A than for the S+T conditions. For sentences, significant improvements to speechreading were observed with both the auditory and tactual supplements for high-context materials but again only with the auditory supplement for low-context materials. The tactual supplement provided a relative gain to speechreading of roughly 25% for all materials except low-context sentences (where gain was only 10%), whereas the auditory supplement provided relative gains of roughly 50% (for vowels, consonants, and low-context sentences) to 75% (for high-context sentences). The envelope cue provides a significant benefit to the speechreading of consonant segments when presented through either the auditory or tactual modality and of vowel segments through audition only. These benefits were found to be related to the reception of the same types of features under both modalities (voicing, manner, and plosion for consonants and low and tense for vowels); however, benefits were larger for auditory compared with tactual presentation. The benefits observed for segmentals appear to carry over into benefits for sentence reception under both modalities.

Research paper thumbnail of 50 Tibial bone density loss in spinal cord injured patients : Effects of FES exercise

Research paper thumbnail of Tactile Communication of Speech

Research paper thumbnail of Research on tactual communication of speech: Ideas, issues, and findings

The Volta review

... Reed, Charlotte M.; Durlach, Nathaniel I.; Delhorne, Lorraine A.; Rabinowitz, William M.; et ... more ... Reed, Charlotte M.; Durlach, Nathaniel I.; Delhorne, Lorraine A.; Rabinowitz, William M.; et al. The Volta Review, Vol 91(5), Sep 1989, 65-78. Abstract. ... 2010 American Psychological Association | PDF documents require Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Research paper thumbnail of 1. LABORATORY EVALUATION OF FEEDBACK REDUCTION ALGORITHMS Three adaptive feedback reduction algorithms plus a reference algorithm were implemented in a laboratory- based digital hearing aid system and evaluated with dynamic feedback paths and hearing-impaired subjects. The evaluation included mea...

Research paper thumbnail of Tactual Cued Speech as a Supplement to Speechreading

Research paper thumbnail of Current Results of a Field Study of Adult Users of Tactile Aids

Seminars in Hearing, 1995

Research paper thumbnail of Two-microphone spatial filtering provides speech reception benefits for cochlear implant users in difficult acoustic environments

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2014

This article introduces and provides an assessment of a spatial-filtering algorithm based on two ... more This article introduces and provides an assessment of a spatial-filtering algorithm based on two closely-spaced (∼1 cm) microphones in a behind-the-ear shell. The evaluated spatial-filtering algorithm used fast (∼10 ms) temporal-spectral analysis to determine the location of incoming sounds and to enhance sounds arriving from straight ahead of the listener. Speech reception thresholds (SRTs) were measured for eight cochlear implant (CI) users using consonant and vowel materials under three processing conditions: An omni-directional response, a dipole-directional response, and the spatial-filtering algorithm. The background noise condition used three simultaneous time-reversed speech signals as interferers located at 90°, 180°, and 270°. Results indicated that the spatial-filtering algorithm can provide speech reception benefits of 5.8 to 10.7 dB SRT compared to an omni-directional response in a reverberant room with multiple noise sources. Given the observed SRT benefits, coupled wi...

Research paper thumbnail of Auditory-filter characteristics for listeners with real and simulated hearing impairment

Trends in amplification, 2012

Functional simulation of sensorineural hearing impairment is an important research tool that can ... more Functional simulation of sensorineural hearing impairment is an important research tool that can elucidate the nature of hearing impairments and suggest or eliminate compensatory signal-processing schemes. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the capability of an audibility-based functional simulation of hearing loss to reproduce the auditory-filter characteristics of listeners with sensorineural hearing loss. The hearing-loss simulation used either threshold-elevating noise alone or a combination of threshold-elevating noise and multiband expansion to reproduce the audibility-based characteristics of the loss (including detection thresholds, dynamic range, and loudness recruitment). The hearing losses of 10 listeners with bilateral, mild-to-severe hearing loss were simulated in 10 corresponding groups of 3 age-matched normal-hearing listeners. Frequency selectivity was measured using a notched-noise masking paradigm at five probe frequencies in the range of 250 to 400...

Research paper thumbnail of A study of the tactual and visual reception of fingerspelling

Journal of speech and hearing research, 1990

A method of communication in frequent use among members of the deaf-blind community is the tactua... more A method of communication in frequent use among members of the deaf-blind community is the tactual reception of fingerspelling. In this method, the hand of the deaf-blind individual is placed on the hand of the sender to monitor the handshapes and movements associated with the letters of the manual alphabet. The purpose of the current study was to examine the ability of experienced deaf-blind subjects to receive fingerspelled materials, including sentences and connected text, through the tactual sense. A parallel study of the reception of fingerspelling through the visual sense was also conducted using sighted deaf subjects. For both visual and tactual reception of fingerspelled sentences, accuracy of reception was examined as a function of rate of presentation. In the tactual study, where rates were limited to those that could be produced naturally by an experienced interpreter, highly accurate reception of conversational sentence materials was observed throughout the range of natu...

Research paper thumbnail of Psychoacoustic and Phoneme Identification Measures in Cochlear-Implant and Normal-Hearing Listeners

Trends in Amplification, 2013

Research paper thumbnail of Auditory Perception and Cognition

Research paper thumbnail of Otoacoustic-emission-based medial-olivocochlear reflex assays for humans

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Effects of Rate of Presentation on the Reception of American Sign Language

Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research, 1999

Previous research on the visual reception of fingerspelled English suggests that communication ra... more Previous research on the visual reception of fingerspelled English suggests that communication rates are limited primarily by constraints on production. Studies of artificially accelerated fingerspelling indicate that reception of fingerspelled sentences is highly accurate for rates up to 2 to 3 times those that can be produced naturally. The current paper reports on the results of a comparable study of the reception of American Sign Language (ASL). Fourteen native deaf ASL signers participated in an experiment in which videotaped productions of isolated ASL signs or ASL sentences were presented at normal playback speed and at speeds of 2, 3, 4, and 6 times normal speed. For isolated signs, identification scores decreased from 95% correct to 46% correct across the range of rates that were tested; for sentences, the ability to identify key signs decreased from 88% to 19% over the range of rates tested. The results indicate a breakdown in processing at around 2.5–3 times the normal ra...