SBIR-STTR Award

Automated Test of Word Recognition - Phase II
Award last edited on: 4/19/19

Sponsored Program
STTR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIDCD
Total Award Amount
$843,609
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Robert H Margolis

Company Information

Audiology Inc

4410 Dellwood Street
Arden Hills, MN 55112
   (651) 639-1985
   audiologyinc@comcast.net
   www.audiologyincorporated.com

Research Institution

University of Minnesota

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R41DC006509-01
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase I year
2003
Phase I Amount
$99,981
Over 5 million word recognition tests are administered annually by audiologists in the United States with an associated cost of more then $100 million. These tests are currently performed manually by high-trained audiologists. This application describes a Phase I development of an automated clinical speech recognition test using clinical test recordings and an automated speech recognition system to score the subjects' responses. Methods for automatically interpreting the test scores will also be explored. The objectives are to increase the accuracy and efficiency of this clinical test while substantially reducing the cost. The automated speech recognition test in combination with the automated puretone audiogram (currently an STI'R Phase II project) will perform diagnostic testing of a majority of audiology patients, freeing the audiologists' time for activities that require their training and skill. Contemporary changes in training and reimbursement patterns create a high demand for automated clinical procedures. The automated procedure could be implemented on existing audiometers with a personal computer that would control the audiometer and run the speech recognition software.

Thesaurus Terms:
audiometry, diagnosis design /evaluation, diagnostic test, speech disorder diagnosis, speech recognition diagnosis quality /standard, hearing test, sensorineural hearing loss clinical research, human subject

Phase II

Contract Number: 2R42DC006509-02A1
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
2005
(last award dollars: 2006)
Phase II Amount
$743,628

Over 5 million word recognition tests are administered annually by audiologists in the United States with an associated cost of more than $100 million. These tests are currently performed manually by highly trained audiologists. This application describes the Phase II development of automated clinical speech recognition tests using clinical test recordings and an automated speech recognition system to score the subjects' responses. A method for automatically interpreting the test scores will also be evaluated. The objectives are to increase the accuracy and efficiency of these clinical tests, substantially reduce the cost, and provide an objective, automatic, evidence-based method for interpreting the results. The automated speech recognition test in combination with the automated pure tone audiogram (currently an STTR Phase II project) will perform diagnostic testing of a majority of audiology patients, freeing the audiologists' time for activities that require their training and skill. Contemporary changes in training and reimbursement patterns create a high demand for automated clinical procedures. The automated procedures are implemented on existing commercial audiometers with a personal computer that controls the audiometer delivery and routing of stimuli. Phase I results were obtained with automatic speech recognizers that were trained on a limited number of subjects (n=9). Estimates of the agreement between human and machine scoring ranged from 82-93%. Additional refinements with benefits that are predictable from prior experience will increase recognizer performance to a level that equals or exceeds human-human agreement and provide the basis for efficient and accurate clinical tests. In Phase II, an automatic speech recognition threshold test will be compared to the manual method used in routine clinical practice. Two different recognizer scoring strategies will be developed, one that requires more test time but is independent of individual speaker differences and is easily adaptable to other languages, and one that requires less time but may not be applicable to all patients. A pilot study will test the method on a Spanish-language speech-recognition test