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Development and evaluation of the Turkish matrix sentence test

Objectives: The Turkish matrix sentence test, TURMatrix, was developed for precise, internationally comparable speech intelligibility testing. Design: The TURMatrix comprises a base matrix of ten well-known Turkish names, numbers, adjectives, objects, verbs, from which syntactically fixed sentences...

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Published in:International journal of audiology 2015-05, Vol.54 (sup2), p.51-61
Main Authors: Zokoll, Melanie A., Fidan, Dilek, Türkyılmaz, Didem, Hochmuth, Sabine, Ergenç, İclâl, Sennaroğlu, Gonca, Kollmeier, Birger
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container_title International journal of audiology
container_volume 54
creator Zokoll, Melanie A.
Fidan, Dilek
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description Objectives: The Turkish matrix sentence test, TURMatrix, was developed for precise, internationally comparable speech intelligibility testing. Design: The TURMatrix comprises a base matrix of ten well-known Turkish names, numbers, adjectives, objects, verbs, from which syntactically fixed sentences were randomly composed. Test conduction may be in an open-set (standard), or closed-set response format. Homogeneity in intelligibility of the test material was optimized by applying level adaptations (maximal ± 3 dB) based on word-specific speech reception thresholds (SRTs). Test list equivalence was verified and reference values were determined. Study sample: Thirty-eight native listeners of Turkish with normal hearing. Results: After training, mean SRT and slope of the final test lists were − 8.3 ± 0.2 dB SNR and 14.1 ± 1.0%/dB, respectively (fixed SNR measurements; inter-list variability). For adaptive measurements, average across listeners was − 7.2 ± 0.7 dB SNR in the open-set and − 7.9 ± 0.7 dB SNR in the closed-set response format. Mean SRT for adaptive measurements in the open-set response format in quiet was 20.3 ± 4.1 dB. Individual SRTs in quiet correlated more closely with audiograms than with SRTs in noise. Conclusions: The TURMatrix was developed according to European standards and provides reliable speech intelligibility measurements in noise and quiet.
doi_str_mv 10.3109/14992027.2015.1074735
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subjects Acoustic Stimulation
Acoustics
Adult
Auditory Threshold
Comprehension
Female
Humans
Language
Male
matrix sentence test, Turkish
Noise - adverse effects
Perceptual Masking
Predictive Value of Tests
Recognition (Psychology)
Reproducibility of Results
Signal-To-Noise Ratio
signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)
Sound Spectrography
Speech audiometry
Speech Intelligibility
Speech Perception
speech reception threshold (SRT)
Speech Reception Threshold Test - methods
speech recognition in noise
Young Adult
title Development and evaluation of the Turkish matrix sentence test
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