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The Reliability and Equivalency of the Persian Version of Quick Speech-in-Noise Test in 7-12-Year-Old
Author(s) -
Atefeh Abolhasani Zeraatkar,
Farzaneh Fatahi,
Saeid Farahani,
Shohreh Jalaie
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
shinavāyī/shināsī./shinavāyī/shināsī
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2008-2657
pISSN - 1735-1936
DOI - 10.18502/avr.v31i2.9115
Subject(s) - persian , reliability (semiconductor) , test (biology) , noise (video) , speech recognition , audiology , psychology , computer science , reliability engineering , engineering , artificial intelligence , linguistics , medicine , philosophy , physics , geology , paleontology , power (physics) , quantum mechanics , image (mathematics)
Background and Aim: In a noisy environment, children struggle more than adults to understand speech. Various tests at different levels of cognition are available to evaluate children’s speech perception abilities in a noisy environment. The present study aimed at determining the reliability and equivalency of the Persian version of the quick speech-in-noise (P-Q-SIN) test in 7-12 years old school-aged children. Methods: A total of 120 (60 girls) students with normal hearing were chosen from primary schools in district 2 of Kerman City, Iran. They were in five age groups ranging from 7 to 12 years (24 children per age group). Pure tone audiometry test was performed on the samples, then nine lists of P-Q-SIN of previous studies (Khalili et al. and Shayanmehr et al.) were administered on these participants. To obtain the test-retest reliability, three weeks later, the re-test was performed. Results: In the test-retest reliability, lists 1 and 4 of Khalili et al. and list 2 of Shayanmehr et al. were highly correlated (p 0.05). The participant’s performance improves as the age increases. Conclusion: None of the lists of Shayanmehr et al. was reliable and equivalent. List 1 and 4 of Khalili et al. were reliable and equivalent; therefore, they can be used in clinical application for children in the age range of 7 to 12 years by considering the norm of signal-to-noise ratio loss. Keywords: Children; equivalency; normal hearing; quick speech-in-noise test; reliability; signal to noise ratio loss

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