Neave-DiToro Dorothy, Rubinstein Adrienne, Neuman Arlene C
Department of Speech Communication Arts and Sciences, Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, NY.
Department of Otolaryngology, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY.
J Am Acad Audiol. 2017 May;28(5):404-414. doi: 10.3766/jaaa.15125.
Limited attention has been given to the effects of classroom acoustics at the college level. Many studies have reported that nonnative speakers of English are more likely to be affected by poor room acoustics than native speakers. An important question is how classroom acoustics affect speech perception of nonnative college students.
The combined effect of noise and reverberation on the speech recognition performance of college students who differ in age of English acquisition was evaluated under conditions simulating classrooms with reverberation times (RTs) close to ANSI recommended RTs.
A mixed design was used in this study.
Thirty-six native and nonnative English-speaking college students with normal hearing, ages 18-28 yr, participated.
Two groups of nine native participants (native monolingual [NM] and native bilingual) and two groups of nine nonnative participants (nonnative early and nonnative late) were evaluated in noise under three reverberant conditions (0.03, 0.06, and 0.08 sec).
A virtual test paradigm was used, which represented a signal reaching a student at the back of a classroom. Speech recognition in noise was measured using the Bamford-Kowal-Bench Speech-in-Noise (BKB-SIN) test and signal-to-noise ratio required for correct repetition of 50% of the key words in the stimulus sentences (SNR-50) was obtained for each group in each reverberant condition. A mixed-design analysis of variance was used to determine statistical significance as a function of listener group and RT.
SNR-50 was significantly higher for nonnative listeners as compared to native listeners, and a more favorable SNR-50 was needed as RT increased. The most dramatic effect on SNR-50 was found in the group with later acquisition of English, whereas the impact of early introduction of a second language was subtler. At the ANSI standard's maximum recommended RT (0.6 sec), all groups except the NM group exhibited a mild signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) loss. At the 0.8 sec RT, all groups exhibited a mild SNR loss.
Acoustics in the classroom are an important consideration for nonnative speakers who are proficient in English and enrolled in college. To address the need for a clearer speech signal by nonnative students (and for all students), universities should follow ANSI recommendations, as well as minimize background noise in occupied classrooms. Behavioral/instructional strategies should be considered to address factors that cannot be compensated for through acoustic design.
大学课堂声学环境的影响受到的关注有限。许多研究报告称,非英语母语者比英语母语者更容易受到教室声学环境差的影响。一个重要的问题是课堂声学环境如何影响非英语母语大学生的言语感知。
在模拟混响时间(RT)接近美国国家标准学会(ANSI)推荐值的教室条件下,评估噪声和混响对不同英语习得年龄的大学生言语识别性能的综合影响。
本研究采用混合设计。
36名年龄在18 - 28岁、听力正常的英语母语和非英语母语大学生参与了研究。
两组各9名英语母语参与者(单语母语者[NM]和双语母语者)以及两组各9名非英语母语参与者(早期非母语者和晚期非母语者)在三种混响条件(0.03、0.06和0.08秒)下接受噪声环境评估。
使用虚拟测试范式,该范式模拟信号到达教室后排学生处的情况。使用班福德 - 科瓦尔 - 本奇噪声中的言语(BKB - SIN)测试测量噪声中的言语识别,并在每种混响条件下为每组获取刺激句子中50%关键词正确重复所需的信噪比(SNR - 50)。采用混合设计方差分析来确定作为听众组和混响时间函数的统计学显著性。
与英语母语听众相比,非英语母语听众的SNR - 50显著更高,并且随着混响时间增加,需要更有利的SNR - 50。对SNR - 50影响最显著的是英语习得较晚的组,而早期引入第二语言的影响则较为微妙。在ANSI标准的最大推荐混响时间(0.6秒)时,除NM组外的所有组均表现出轻微的信噪比(SNR)损失。在0.8秒混响时间时,所有组均表现出轻微的SNR损失。
对于熟练掌握英语并进入大学的非英语母语者而言,课堂声学环境是一个重要的考虑因素。为满足非英语母语学生(以及所有学生)对更清晰语音信号的需求,大学应遵循ANSI的建议,并尽量减少教室中的背景噪声。应考虑行为/教学策略,以解决无法通过声学设计弥补的因素。