Kirk K I, Hay-McCutcheon M, Sehgal S T, Miyamoto R T
Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, USA.
Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol Suppl. 2000 Dec;185:79-81. doi: 10.1177/0003489400109s1234.
The present results demonstrated that all 3 factors --lexical difficulty, stimulus variability, and word length--significantly influenced spoken word recognition by children with multichannel cochlear implants. Lexically easy words were recognized significantly better than lexically hard words, regardless of talker condition or word length of the stimuli. These results support the earlier findings of Kirk et al(12) obtained with live-voice stimulus presentation and suggest that lexical effects are very robust. Despite the fact that listeners with cochlear implants receive a degraded speech signal, it appears that they organize and access words from memory relationally in the context of other words. The present results concerning talker variability contradict those previously reported in the literature for listeners with normal hearing(7,11) and for listeners with mild-to-moderate hearing loss who use hearing aids.(14) The previous investigators used talkers and word lists different from those used in the current study and found that word recognition declined as talker variability increased. In the current study, word recognition was better in the multiple-talker condition than in the single-talker condition. Kirk(15) reported similar results for postlingually deafened adults with cochlear implants who were tested on the recorded word lists used in the present study. Although the talkers were equally intelligible to listeners with normal hearing in the pilot study, they were not equally intelligible to children or adults with cochlear implants. It appears that either the man in the single-talker condition was particularly difficult to understand or that some of the talkers in the multiple-talker condition were particularly easy to understand. Despite the unexpected direction of the talker effects, the present results demonstrate that children with cochlear implants are sensitive to differences among talkers and that talker characteristics influence their spoken word recognition. We are conducting a study to assess the intelligibility of each of the 6 talkers to listeners with cochlear implants. Such studies should aid the development of equivalent testing conditions for listeners with cochlear implants. There are 2 possible reasons the children in the present study identified multisyllabic words better than monosyllabic words. First, they may use the linguistic redundancy cues in multisyllabic words to aid in spoken word recognition. Second, multisyllabic words come from relatively sparse lexical neighborhoods compared with monosyllabic tokens. That is, multisyllabic words have fewer phonetically similar words, or neighbors, competing for selection than do monosyllabic stimuli. These lexical characteristics most likely contribute to the differences in identification noted as a function of word length. The significant lexical and word length effects noted here may yield important diagnostic information about spoken word recognition by children with sensory aids. For example, children who can make relatively fine phonetic distinctions should demonstrate only small differences in the recognition of lexically easy versus hard words or of monosyllabic versus multisyllabic stimuli. In contrast, children who process speech using broad phonetic categories should show much larger differences. That is, they may not be able to accurately encode words in general or lexically hard words specifically. Further study is warranted to determine the interaction between spoken word recognition and individual word encoding strategies.
目前的研究结果表明,词汇难度、刺激变异性和单词长度这三个因素均对多通道人工耳蜗植入儿童的口语单词识别产生显著影响。无论说话者条件或刺激的单词长度如何,词汇简单的单词比词汇复杂的单词识别效果显著更好。这些结果支持了柯克等人(12)早期通过现场语音刺激呈现所获得的研究发现,并表明词汇效应非常显著。尽管人工耳蜗植入者接收到的是退化的语音信号,但他们似乎能在其他单词的语境中,以关联的方式从记忆中组织和提取单词。目前有关说话者变异性的研究结果与先前文献中针对正常听力者(7,11)以及使用助听器的轻至中度听力损失者(14)所报道的结果相矛盾。先前的研究者使用的说话者和单词列表与本研究不同,他们发现随着说话者变异性增加,单词识别率下降。在本研究中,多说话者条件下的单词识别效果优于单说话者条件。柯克(15)报道,对于使用本研究中所使用的录制单词列表进行测试的语后聋成年人工耳蜗植入者,也得到了类似的结果。尽管在预实验中,这些说话者对正常听力者而言具有同等可懂度,但对人工耳蜗植入的儿童或成人来说并非如此。似乎要么单说话者条件下的男性特别难以理解,要么多说话者条件下的一些说话者特别容易理解。尽管说话者效应的方向出乎意料,但本研究结果表明,人工耳蜗植入儿童对说话者之间的差异敏感,且说话者特征会影响他们的口语单词识别。我们正在进行一项研究,以评估这6名说话者对人工耳蜗植入者的可懂度。此类研究应有助于为人工耳蜗植入者开发等效的测试条件。本研究中的儿童识别多音节单词比单音节单词更好,可能有两个原因。首先,他们可能利用多音节单词中的语言冗余线索来辅助口语单词识别。其次,与单音节词相比,多音节词来自相对稀疏的词汇邻域。也就是说,与单音节刺激相比,多音节词在语音上相似的单词或邻词较少,相互竞争选择的情况也较少。这些词汇特征很可能导致了因单词长度而产生的识别差异。这里所指出的显著的词汇和单词长度效应,可能会产生有关使用感官辅助设备的儿童口语单词识别的重要诊断信息。例如,能够进行相对精细语音区分的儿童,在识别词汇简单与复杂的单词或单音节与多音节刺激时,差异应该较小。相反,使用宽泛语音类别处理语音的儿童,差异应该大得多。也就是说,他们可能总体上无法准确编码单词,尤其是词汇复杂的单词。有必要进一步研究以确定口语单词识别与个体单词编码策略之间的相互作用。