The Central Institute for the Deaf (CID) in St. Louis, founded in 1914, became the primary American research centre for clinical hearing measurement under its director Edmund Prince Fowler and then Hallowell Davis. During and after WWII, with thousands of veterans needing aural rehabilitation, CID developed the standardised word lists that became the US clinical baseline.
The CID W-1 spondee list (36 two-syllable words) was published by Hudgins, Hawkins, Karlin, and Stevens in 1947 and remains in clinical use today, though digital recordings have replaced the original 78-rpm phonograph records. The CID W-22 mono-syllabic word list (50 phonetically-balanced words across four 50-word sub-lists) was developed by Hirsh, Davis, Silverman, Reynolds, Eldert, and Benson in 1952 as the open-set word-recognition standard.
Raymond Carhart, at Northwestern, championed using both — SRT plus a separate WRS at a comfortable level — as the speech-audiometry “fingerprint” of a hearing loss. Carhart’s clinical protocols, codified in his 1971 Modern Developments in Audiology chapter on speech audiometry, are essentially the protocols US audiologists still follow.
The biggest modern evolution is the move from quiet to noise: speech-in-noise testing (HINT, QuickSIN, BKB-SIN, AzBio) developed from the 1990s onward to address the well-documented fact that quiet WRS poorly predicts real-world function. We cover those in 3.3.