Portable Automated Rapid Testing (PART) for auditory assessment: Validation in a young adult normal-hearing population

E. Sebastian Lelo De Larrea-Mancera, Trevor Stavropoulos, Eric C. Hoover, David A. Eddins, Frederick J. Gallun, Aaron R. Seitz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study aims to determine the degree to which Portable Automated Rapid Testing (PART), a freely available program running on a tablet computer, is capable of reproducing standard laboratory results. Undergraduate students were assigned to one of three within-subject conditions that examined repeatability of performance on a battery of psychoacoustical tests of temporal fine structure processing, spectro-temporal amplitude modulation, and targets in competition. The repeatability condition examined test/retest with the same system, the headphones condition examined the effects of varying headphones (passive and active noise-attenuating), and the noise condition examined repeatability in the presence of recorded cafeteria noise. In general, performance on the test battery showed high repeatability, even across manipulated conditions, and was similar to that reported in the literature. These data serve as validation that suprathreshold psychoacoustical tests can be made accessible to run on consumer-grade hardware and perform in less controlled settings. This dataset also provides a distribution of thresholds that can be used as a normative baseline against which auditory dysfunction can be identified in future work.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1831-1851
Number of pages21
JournalJournal of the Acoustical Society of America
Volume148
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2020

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
  • Acoustics and Ultrasonics

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