Center for Hearing Research, Boys Town National Research Hospital, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Ear Hear. 2018 Sep/Oct;39(5):935-945. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000554.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the extent to which infants, school-age children, and adults benefit from a target/masker sex mismatch in the context of speech detection or recognition in a background of 2 competing talkers. It was hypothesized that the ability to benefit from a target/masker sex mismatch develops between infancy and the early school-age years, as children gain listening experience in multi-talker environments.
Listeners were infants (7 to 13 months), children (5 to 10 years), and adults (18 to 33 years) with normal hearing. A series of five experiments compared speech detection or recognition in continuous two-talker speech across target/masker conditions that were sex matched or sex mismatched. In experiments 1 and 2, an observer-based, single-interval procedure was used to estimate speech detection thresholds for a spondaic word in a two-talker speech masker. In experiments 3 and 4, speech recognition thresholds were estimated in continuous two-talker speech using a four-alternative, forced-choice procedure. In experiment 5, speech reception thresholds (SRTs) were estimated for adults using the forced-choice recognition procedure after ideal time-frequency segregation processing was applied to the stimuli.
Speech detection thresholds for adults tested in experiments 1 and 2 were significantly higher when the target word and speech masker were matched in sex than when they were mismatched, but thresholds for infants were similar across sex-matched and sex-mismatched conditions. Results for experiments 3 and 4 showed that school-age children and adults benefit from a target/masker sex mismatch for a forced-choice word recognition task. Children, however, obtained greater benefit than adults in 1 condition, perhaps due to greater susceptibility to masking overall. In experiment 5, adults had substantial threshold reductions and more uniform performance across the 4 conditions evaluated in experiments 3 and 4 after the application of ideal time-frequency segregation to the stimuli.
The pattern of results observed across experiments suggests that the ability to take advantage of differences in vocal characteristics typically found between speech produced by male and female talkers develops between infancy and the school-age years. Considerable child-adult differences in susceptibility to speech-in-speech masking were observed for school-age children as old as 11 years of age in both sex-matched and sex-mismatched conditions.
本研究旨在评估婴儿、学童和成人在有两个竞争说话者的背景下,通过言语检测或识别,从目标/掩蔽者性别不匹配中受益的程度。研究假设,随着儿童在多说话者环境中获得听力经验,从目标/掩蔽者性别不匹配中受益的能力会在婴儿期和学龄早期发展。
听力正常的听众包括婴儿(7 至 13 个月)、儿童(5 至 10 岁)和成人(18 至 33 岁)。进行了五个实验,通过比较目标/掩蔽者条件在性别匹配和不匹配的情况下,在连续的双说话者语音掩蔽中进行言语检测或识别。在实验 1 和 2 中,使用基于观察者的单间隔程序估计了在双说话者语音掩蔽中的一个斯波达词的言语检测阈值。在实验 3 和 4 中,使用四选一的强制选择程序,在连续的双说话者语音中估计了言语识别阈值。在实验 5 中,在对刺激应用理想的时频分离处理后,使用强制选择识别程序估计了成人的言语接收阈值(SRT)。
在实验 1 和 2 中测试的成人的言语检测阈值在目标词和语音掩蔽者在性别上匹配时显著高于不匹配时,但婴儿的阈值在性别匹配和不匹配条件下相似。实验 3 和 4 的结果表明,学童和成人在强制选择词识别任务中受益于目标/掩蔽者性别不匹配。然而,在一种情况下,儿童比成人获得了更大的收益,这可能是由于总体上对掩蔽的敏感性更高。在实验 5 中,在对刺激应用理想的时频分离后,成年人在实验 3 和 4 中评估的 4 个条件下的阈值有显著降低,且表现更为一致。
在实验中观察到的结果模式表明,从典型的男女说话者的语音特征差异中受益的能力在婴儿期和学龄早期之间发展。在性别匹配和不匹配条件下,即使是 11 岁的大龄学童,在言语掩蔽方面,儿童和成人之间也存在明显的敏感性差异。