It's best if more people watch it and see how it needs to be interpreted.
As
@FGG says above I remember this was discussed months ago on the forum (after results of the first trial). Perhaps it played part in how I interpreted the presentation. Please do have a look at it, they referred to the improvements as "intelligibility".
So, what else is possible that they had participants with doubled word scores?
Were the list words every time the same? Did the participants memorise the words over time and hence improved? Do we know if the words were randomised? I can't imagine they were not different during every test? That would obviously highly influence the results and we would not be able to draw any scientific conclusions from them. They didn't state randomisation, but I just can't imagine that would not be the case.
Has anyone done several word tests? Can you confirm they are randomised every time?
Other than that I cannot see how the participants suddenly had a doubled word score. There is just no way to attain such an improvement without actually having improved the hearing system on some level.
The blind spot is currently >8kHz. We will have to wait until September to confirm our interpretation on why we saw doubled word scores.
The reason why I feel that there were improvements in the UHF reason is that they did see a 10dB threshold shift at 8kHz for 4 out of 6 people (in the positive sense) and it may not sound like much, but it is significant! In my opinion that 10dB is not related to poor testing. I've done multiple audiograms and I never scored a 10dB variation on them. Perhaps you can have a 5dB variation, but 10 is quite a lot. So if there was real improvement at 8kHz and we know that their delivery compound has limitations to get very far in the cochlea, then what else could we conclude than that there should have been some improvement >8kHz. It's not like the small molecules are going to jump over the UHF and only work at 8kHz.
I feel positive about it.