2014-10-01
Development of a Dutch matrix sentence test to assess speech intelligibility in noise
Publication
Publication
International Journal of Audiology , Volume 53 - Issue 10 p. 760- 763
Objective: A Dutch matrix sentence test was developed and evaluated. A matrix test is a speech-in-noise test based on a closed speech corpus of sentences derived from words from fixed categories. An example is "Mark gives five large flowers." Design: This report consists of the development of the speech test and a multi-center evaluation Study sample: Forty-five normal-hearing participants. Results: The developed matrix test has a speech reception threshold in stationary noise of - 8.4 dB with an inter-list standard deviation of 0.2 dB. The slope of the intelligibility function is 10.2 %/dB and this is slightly lower than that of similar tests in other languages (12.6 to 17.1 %/dB). Conclusions: The matrix test is now also available in Dutch and can be used in both Flanders and the Netherlands.
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doi.org/10.3109/14992027.2014.920111, hdl.handle.net/1765/81487 | |
International Journal of Audiology | |
Organisation | Erasmus MC: University Medical Center Rotterdam |
Houben, R., Koopman, J., Luts, H., Wagener, K. C., Van Wieringen, A., Verschuure, H., & Dreschler, W. (2014). Development of a Dutch matrix sentence test to assess speech intelligibility in noise. International Journal of Audiology, 53(10), 760–763. doi:10.3109/14992027.2014.920111 |