Donaldson Gail S, Kreft Heather A
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida 33620, USA.
Ear Hear. 2006 Dec;27(6):658-77. doi: 10.1097/01.aud.0000240543.31567.54.
Scores on consonant-recognition tests are widely used as an index of speech-perception ability in cochlear implant (CI) users. The consonant stimuli in these tests are typically presented in the /alpha/ vowel context, even though consonants in conversational speech occur in many other contexts. For this reason, it would be useful to know whether vowel context has any systematic effect on consonant recognition in this population. The purpose of the present study was to compare consonant recognition for the /alpha, i/, and /u/ vowel contexts for consonants presented in both initial (Cv) and medial (vCv) positions.
Twenty adult CI users with one of three different implanted devices underwent consonant-confusion testing. Twelve stimulus conditions that differed according to vowel context (/alpha, i, u/), consonant position (Cv, vCv), and talker gender (male, female) were assessed in each subject.
Mean percent-correct consonant-recognition scores were slightly (5 to 8%) higher for the /alpha/ and /u/ vowel contexts than for the /i/ vowel context for both initial and medial consonants. This general pattern was observed for both male and female talkers, for subjects with better and poorer average consonant-recognition performance, and for subjects using low, medium, and high stimulation rates in their speech processors. In contrast to the mean data, many individual subjects demonstrated large effects of vowel context. For 10 of 20 subjects, consonant-recognition scores varied by 15% or more across vowel contexts in one or more stimulus conditions. Similar to the mean data, these differences generally reflected better performance for the /alpha/ and /u/ vowel contexts than for the /i/ vowel context. An analysis of consonant features showed that overall performance was best for the voicing feature, followed by the manner and place features, and that the place feature showed the strongest effect of vowel context. Vowel-context effects were strongest for the six consonants /d, j, n, k, m/, and /l/. For three of these consonants (/j, n, k/), the back vowels /alpha/ and /u/ produced substantially (30 to 35%) higher mean scores than the front vowel /i/. For each of the remaining three consonants, a unique pattern was observed in which a different single vowel produced substantially higher scores than the others. Several additional consonants (/s, g, w, b/, and /d/) showed strong context effects in either the initial consonant or medial consonant position. Overall, voiceless stop, nasal, and glide-liquid consonants showed the strongest effects of vowel context, whereas the voiceless fricative and voiceless affricate consonants were least affected. Consistent with the feature analysis, a qualitative assessment of phoneme errors for the six key consonants indicated that vowel-context effects stem primarily from changes in the number of place-of-articulation errors made in each context.
Vowel context has small but significant effects on consonant-recognition scores for the "average" CI listener, with the back vowels /alpha/ and /u/ producing better performance than the front vowel /i/. In contrast to the average results, however, the effects of vowel context are sizable in some individual subjects. This suggests that it may be beneficial to assess consonant recognition using two vowels, such as /alpha/ and /i/, which produce better and poorer performance, respectively. The present results underscore previous findings that poor transmission of spectral speech cues limits consonant-recognition performance in CI users. Spectral cue transmission may be hindered not only by poor spectral resolution in these listeners but also by the brief duration and dynamic nature of consonant place-of-articulation cues.
辅音识别测试的分数被广泛用作人工耳蜗(CI)使用者言语感知能力的指标。这些测试中的辅音刺激通常在/α/元音语境中呈现,尽管对话言语中的辅音出现在许多其他语境中。因此,了解元音语境是否对该人群的辅音识别有任何系统性影响将是有用的。本研究的目的是比较在词首(Cv)和词中(vCv)位置呈现的辅音在/α/、/i/和/u/元音语境中的辅音识别情况。
20名使用三种不同植入设备之一的成年CI使用者接受了辅音混淆测试。在每个受试者中评估了12种根据元音语境(/α/、/i/、/u/)、辅音位置(Cv、vCv)和说话者性别(男性、女性)而不同的刺激条件。
对于词首和词中辅音,/α/和/u/元音语境的平均辅音识别正确百分比分数比/i/元音语境略高(5%至8%)。对于男性和女性说话者、平均辅音识别表现较好和较差的受试者以及在其言语处理器中使用低、中、高刺激率的受试者,都观察到了这种总体模式。与平均数据相反,许多个体受试者表现出元音语境的巨大影响。在20名受试者中的10名中,在一种或多种刺激条件下,辅音识别分数在不同元音语境中的差异为15%或更多。与平均数据相似,这些差异通常反映出/α/和/u/元音语境的表现优于/i/元音语境。对辅音特征的分析表明,总体表现对于浊音特征最佳,其次是发音方式和发音部位特征,并且发音部位特征显示出最强的元音语境效应。元音语境效应对于/d/、/j/、/n/、/k/、/m/和/l/这六个辅音最强。对于其中三个辅音(/j/、/n/、/k/),后元音/α/和/u/产生的平均分数比前元音/i/高得多(30%至35%)。对于其余三个辅音中的每一个,都观察到一种独特的模式,其中一个不同的单个元音产生的分数比其他元音高得多。几个额外的辅音(/s/、/g/、/w/、/b/和/d/)在词首辅音或词中辅音位置显示出强烈的语境效应。总体而言,清塞音、鼻音和滑音-流音辅音显示出最强的元音语境效应,而清擦音和清塞擦音辅音受影响最小。与特征分析一致,对六个关键辅音的音素错误进行的定性评估表明,元音语境效应主要源于每个语境中发音部位错误数量的变化。
元音语境对“平均”CI听众的辅音识别分数有小但显著的影响,后元音/α/和/u/的表现优于前元音/i/。然而,与平均结果相反,元音语境效应在一些个体受试者中相当大。这表明使用两个元音,如/α/和/i/,分别产生较好和较差的表现来评估辅音识别可能是有益的。本研究结果强调了先前的发现,即频谱言语线索的不良传递限制了CI使用者的辅音识别表现。频谱线索传递可能不仅受到这些听众频谱分辨率差的阻碍,还受到辅音发音部位线索的短暂持续时间和动态性质的阻碍。