| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
1 Department of Communicative Disorders California State University, Long Beach
Some variables affecting the slope of monosyllabic word functions were investigated among subjects having mild-to-moderate sensorineural hearing loss. Slope is an important variable because it determines the intensity range and the step size that is likely to accurately and efficiently describe the function. Eighty-one ears from 60 elderly subjects were tested with the Auditec recording of the CID W-22 words. Slopes were computed between the 20 and 80% intelligibility points from the individual functions. The results indicated that the magnitude of hearing loss did not affect the slope of the intelligibility function. That is, slopes remained at approximately 3% per dB even though spondaic thresholds varied over a 45-dB range (15-60 dB HTL). The audiometric configuration was found to affect slope, although this relationship was weak (r=.30). As the audiogram progressed from flat to steeply falling, the slope decreased from about 3.5% per dB to 2.5% per dB. With subjects having flat and falling audiograms, slope was steeper for the 20-50% intelligibility segment (4.3% per dB) than for the 50-80% interval (2.9% per dB). These subjects also exhibited substantial differences in mean slope, depending on the procedure selected for computations. The mean of individual slopes was steepest (3.3% per dB), whereas the mean slope was only 2.4% per dB when computed from the function derived in the conventional manner by averaging intelligibility scores at fixed intensities.
Submitted on February 26, 1982
Accepted on December 20, 1982
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| All ASHA Journals | AJA | AJSLP | JSLHR | LSHSS |