The Essential Guide to Hearing Loss

Part 2:  Understanding Audiograms, Hearing Loss, and Speech Intelligibility

Introduction to the Audiogram
How to read an audiogram.

Hearing loss and speech intelligibility: the role of vowels and consonants
How hearing loss affects our ability to understand speech. ("I can hear the words, I just can't understand them.")



Introduction to the Audiogram:
a picture of our hearing thresholds

The audiogram is a picture of how well we hear. It shows the softest sounds we can hear at different pitches or frequencies. This is known as the threshold hearing level for each frequency. In the audiogram below, look at the left-hand column. As we move down the column, the sounds are getting louder and louder. (See Decibels in Part 1 for the actual loudness of different decibel levels.)

Now take a look at the row of figures on the top (250, 500, 1000, etc.). As we move to the right the sounds are increasing in pitch, like the keys on a piano. We say they are increasing in frequency or cycles per second and they are measured in units called hertz (Hz). Thus, a sound that measures 5000 hertz is much higher pitched than a sound that measures 250 hertz. Children can hear sounds up to about 20,000 hertz, but as we grow older we gradually lose our ability to hear higher-pitched sounds.

The subject above has a 10 dB threshhold hearing level for most sounds, meaning he can't hear sounds below 10 dB in volume. For higher-pitched sounds above 4000 Hz, his threshhold hearing rises to 20 dB. Any loss up to about 20 dB is considered normal. (See Ranges of Hearing Loss in Part 1.)

The audiogram below is typical of someone with moderate/severe hearing loss.

 

What is the significance of this audiogram? What can it tell us about this person's ability to understand speech? We'll see in the next section.

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Hearing Loss and Speech Intelligibility

In the audiogram below, you can see where our basic speech sounds lie when engaging in normal conversation.

Two things are important to recognize. For the most part:

  1. Consonants are higher pitched than vowels (they lie more to the right on the chart).
  2. Consonants are spoken more softly than vowels (they lie higher on the chart, in the lower decibel ranges).

These factors play a big role in our ability to understand speech. For one thing, the great majority of people with hearing loss lose it in the higher frequencies, where the consonants lie. This is especially true of hearing loss due to aging. So a lot of older people hear the vowels but not the consonants. In addition, since consonants are spoken more softly, they tend to get drowned out in background noise.

(Tech note: Remember how we said earlier (Decibels) that every 10 dB increase or decrease doubles or halves the perceived loudness of the sound? Keeping that in mind, we can see that the "a" at 40 dB sounds twice as loud as the "p" (30 dB) and four times a loud as the "th" at 20 dB. The "e" (50 dB) sounds twice as loud as the "a", four times as loud as the "p", etc.)

Most vowels and consonants lie in the following regions:

So your typical person with hearing loss will have trouble hearing the consonants in the first place. He may be hanging on by a thread. Add a little background noise and he may lose them altogether. And since we're on the subject of speech intelligibility there is one more fact to consider:

3. Consonants convey most of the word information;  they are much more important to speech intelligibility than vowels.

It is usually possible, for example, to figure out a word if you remove the vowels. But if you remove the consonants, you're lost. Try it yourself. Have a friend copy a line of text, leaving out the vowels. See if you can decipher the words. Then have him copy another line, this time leaving out the consonants. You'll find that it's pretty much impossible to reconstruct the original text.

If you or someone you know has ever said, "I can hear the words, I just can't understand them," this is probably why.

(One additional characteristic of consonants: they act as breakpoints, separating syllables and words from one another. If we can't hear the consonants clearly, the words seem to run together and people sound like they are mumbling. And since women and children have higher-pitched voices than men, it seems like they mumble more.)

Putting it together:

  1. Consonants are more important than vowels in understanding speech.
  2. Consonants are spoken more softly than vowels, and they tend to get drowned out in noisy environments.
  3. Consonants are higher-pitched than vowels and and most hearing loss occurs in the higher frequencies.

It's harder for people with hearing loss to hear the consonants in the first place, and noisy environments just makes it worse. No matter how hard they try, they are just not getting it all. The result is fatigue, frustration, and an increasing reluctance to engage in socially frustrating situations.

To illustrate how a hearing loss affects speech comprehension, we will now superimpose the audiogram of the person with moderate/severe hearing loss over the speech zone. The screened area lies below the subject's threshold of hearing, i.e., what he can't hear.

As you can see, in a normal conversation this person will simply not be able to hear many of the consonants. The other person will have to speak considerably louder to be understood. That is, he will have to push the loudness of his speech above the subject's threshold of hearing. This obviously puts a strain on everybody involved.

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Part 3: Communication Tips and Strategies

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