There are varying amounts of hearing
loss
People who are hard of hearing have
hearing loss but usually not enough to
be considered deaf. Many people who are
deaf consider spoken language their
primary language and consider
themselves "hard of hearing".
How one classifies themselves relative
to hearing loss or deafness is a very
personal decision and reflects much
more than just their ability to
hear.
The phrase hard of hearing, normally
used as an adjective or adverb, can
also be used as a noun, referring to
people with hearing impairment as the
hard of hearing. People who consider
themselves culturally deaf, prefer the
term "hard of hearing" or "deaf", and
perceive "hearing impaired" as an
insult.
Hearing impaired persons with partial
loss of hearing may find that the
quality of their hearing varies from
day to day, or from one situation to
another or not at all. They may also,
to a greater or lesser extent, depend
on both hearing-aids and lip-reading.
They may perhaps not always be aware of
it, but they do admit to it being
important to see the speaker's face in
conversation.
Many people with hearing loss have
better hearing in the lower frequency
ranges (low tones), and cannot hear as
well or at all in the higher
frequencies. Some people may merely
find it difficult to differentiate
between words that begin with
consonantal sounds such as the
fricatives or sibilants, z, or th, or
the plosives d, t, b, or p. They may be
unable to hear thin, high-pitched or
metallic noises, such as birds chirping
or singing, clocks ticking, etc. Often,
they are able to hear and understand
men's voices better than women's.
Others will find their condition so
much worse if circumstances in their
immediate environment affect the way
they are able to use their hearing
aids, or prevent them from employing
their speech reading skills. A room
with a high ceiling and a lot of
reverberation will affect the sound of
a speaker's voice adversely. The
position of the listener, too, sitting
at a right angle to the speaker at a
long seminar table, thus being able to
hear only with one, maybe the
ineffectual ear, can make a difference.
Difficulties can also arise for the
listener trying to lip-read, if the
speaker is sitting with his back
against the light-source and is in this
way obscuring his face. A rule of thumb
is that bright lighting is to the
hearing-impaired what noise is to the
hearing; a source of distraction.
The speaker's accent; the topic under
discussion, possibly with many
unfamiliar words; the softness of his
voice; possibly his having a speech
impediment; a habit of holding a hand
in front of his mouth or turning his
face away at times: all these
tendencies cause problems to the
hard-of-hearing, especially when they
have to rely on lip-reading. The
rustling of papers, and notebook pages
being turned are precisely the noises
that will be the first thing
hearing-aids pick up.
Noisy situations are especially
difficult, because hearing loss not
only affects the ability to hear
sounds, but also to localize and filter
out background noise.
Unilateral hearing loss
People with unilateral hearing loss
(single sided deafness/SSD) can hear
normally in one ear, but have trouble
hearing out of the other ear. Problems
with this type of deficit is inability
to localize sounds (ie. unable to tell
where traffic is coming from) and
inability to process out background
noise in a noisy environment, such as
in a restaurant.