Skip to content
Home » Blog » Pure-Tone Audiometry Outside A Sound Booth, Using Earphone Attenuation, Integrated Noise Monitoring, & Automation

Pure-Tone Audiometry Outside A Sound Booth, Using Earphone Attenuation, Integrated Noise Monitoring, & Automation

Abstract

Objective

Accessibility of audiometry is hindered by the cost of sound booths and shortage of hearing health personnel. This study investigated the validity of an automated mobile diagnostic audiometer with increased attenuation and real-time noise monitoring for clinical testing outside a sound booth.

Design

Attenuation characteristics and reference ambient noise levels for the computer-based audiometer (KUDUwave) was evaluated alongside the validity of environmental noise monitoring. Clinical validity was determined by comparing air- and bone-conduction thresholds obtained inside and outside the sound booth (23 subjects).

Study Sample

Twenty-three normal-hearing subjects (age range, 20–75 years; average age 35.5) and a sub group of 11 subjects to establish test-retest reliability.

Results

Improved passive attenuation and valid environmental noise monitoring was demonstrated. Clinically, air-conduction thresholds inside and outside the sound booth, corresponded within 5 dB or less > 90% of instances (mean absolute difference 3.3 ± 3.2 SD). Bone conduction thresholds corresponded within 5 dB or less in 80% of comparisons between test environments, with a mean absolute difference of 4.6 dB (3.7 SD). Threshold differences were not statistically significant. Mean absolute test-retest differences outside the sound booth was similar to those in the booth.

Conclusion

Diagnostic pure-tone audiometry outside a sound booth, using automated testing, improved passive attenuation, and real-time environmental noise monitoring demonstrated reliable hearing assessments.

Authors: DW Swanepoel, C Matthysen, RH Eikelboom, JL Clark, JW Hall III
Journal: International Journal of Audiology, 2015 • Taylor & Francis