SUVAG Polyclinic, Zagreb, Croatia.
Ear Hear. 2010 Dec;31(6):806-14. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0b013e3181ee6b64.
The study was carried out to assess the role that five hearing history variables (chronological age, age at onset of deafness, age of first cochlear implant [CI] activation, duration of CI use, and duration of known deafness) play in the ability of CI users to identify speaker gender.
Forty-one juvenile CI users participated in two voice gender identification tasks. In a fixed, single-interval task, subjects listened to a single speech item from one of 20 adult male or 20 adult female speakers and had to identify speaker gender. In an adaptive speech-based voice gender discrimination task with the fundamental frequency difference between the voices as the adaptive parameter, subjects listened to a pair of speech items presented in sequential order, one of which was always spoken by an adult female and the other by an adult male. Subjects had to identify the speech item spoken by the female voice. Correlation and regression analyses between perceptual scores in the two tasks and the hearing history variables were performed.
Subjects fell into three performance groups: (1) those who could distinguish voice gender in both tasks, (2) those who could distinguish voice gender in the adaptive but not the fixed task, and (3) those who could not distinguish voice gender in either task. Gender identification performance for single voices in the fixed task was significantly and negatively related to the duration of deafness before cochlear implantation (shorter deafness yielded better performance), whereas performance in the adaptive task was weakly but significantly related to age at first activation of the CI device, with earlier activations yielding better scores.
The existence of a group of subjects able to perform adaptive discrimination but unable to identify the gender of singly presented voices demonstrates the potential dissociability of the skills required for these two tasks, suggesting that duration of deafness and age of cochlear implantation could have dissociable effects on the development of different skills required by CI users to identify speaker gender.
本研究旨在评估五个听力史变量(年龄、耳聋起始年龄、人工耳蜗(CI)首次激活年龄、CI 使用年限和已知耳聋年限)在 CI 用户识别说话人性别能力中的作用。
41 名青少年 CI 用户参与了两项语音性别识别任务。在固定的单一间隔任务中,受试者听了来自 20 名成年男性或 20 名成年女性说话者的单个语音项目,并必须识别说话者的性别。在基于语音的基本频率差作为自适应参数的自适应语音性别辨别任务中,受试者听了一对以顺序方式呈现的语音项目,其中一个始终由成年女性说话,另一个由成年男性说话。受试者必须识别女性声音的语音项目。对两项任务中的感知得分与听力史变量之间进行了相关和回归分析。
受试者分为三组:(1)能够在两项任务中都区分语音性别的组;(2)能够在自适应任务中但不能在固定任务中区分语音性别的组;(3)不能在两项任务中都区分语音性别的组。在固定任务中,单声道语音性别识别性能与人工耳蜗植入前的耳聋持续时间显著负相关(耳聋持续时间越短,性能越好),而在自适应任务中的性能与人工耳蜗装置首次激活年龄弱相关,但具有显著相关性,较早的激活产生更好的分数。
存在一组能够进行自适应辨别但无法识别单个呈现声音性别的受试者,这表明这两项任务所需技能可能存在可分离性,这表明耳聋持续时间和人工耳蜗植入年龄可能对 CI 用户识别说话人性别所需不同技能的发展产生可分离的影响。