Recognition of multiply degraded speech by young and elderly listeners |
Author(s):
Journal/Book: J Speech Hear Res. 1995; 38: 10801 Rockville Pike Rd, Rockville, MD 20852-3279. Amer Speech-Lang-Hearing Assn. 1150-1156.
Abstract: This study investigated the hypothesis that age effects exert an increased influence on speech recognition performance as the number of acoustic degradations of the speech signal increases. Four groups participated: young listeners with normal hearing, elderly listeners with normal hearing, young listeners with hearing loss, and elderly listeners with hearing loss. Recognition was assessed for sentence materials degraded by noise, reverberation, or time compression, either in isolation or in binary combinations. Performance scores were converted to an equivalent signal-to-noise ratio index to facilitate direct comparison of the effects of different forms of stimulus degradation. Age effects were observed primarily in multiple degradation conditions featuring time compression of the stimuli. These results are discussed in terms of a postulated change in functional signal-to-noise ratio with increasing age.
Note: Article S Gordonsalant, Univ Maryland, Dept Speech & Hearing Sci, Lefrak Hall, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
Keyword(s): speech recognition; aging; reverberation; time compression; noise; HEARING-LOSS; NOISE; REVERBERATION; PERCEPTION
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