Adams Elizabeth M, Moore Robert E
Department of Speech Language Pathology and Audiology, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL 36688-0002, USA.
J Am Acad Audiol. 2009 Jan;20(1):28-39. doi: 10.3766/jaaa.20.1.3.
To study the effect of noise on speech rate judgment and signal-to-noise ratio threshold (SNR50) at different speech rates (slow, preferred, and fast).
Speech rate judgment and SNR50 tasks were completed in a normal-hearing condition and a simulated hearing-loss condition.
Twenty-four female and six male young, normal-hearing participants.
Speech rate judgment was not affected by background noise regardless of hearing condition. Results of the SNR50 task indicated that, as speech rate increased, performance decreased for both hearing conditions. There was a moderate correlation between speech rate judgment and SNR50 with the various speech rates, such that as judgment of speech rate increased from too slow to too fast, performance deteriorated.
These findings can be used to support the need for counseling patients and their families about the potential advantages to using average speech rates or rates that are slightly slowed while conversing in the presence of background noise.