Flaherty Mary, Libert Kelsey, Monson Brian B
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign901 S Sixth St, Champaign, IL 61820, United States.
Department of Speech and Hearing Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign901 S Sixth St, Champaign, IL 61820, United States.
Hear Res. 2021 Jul;406:108230. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2021.108230. Epub 2021 Apr 8.
While the audible frequency range for humans spans approximately 20 Hz to 20 kHz, children display enhanced sensitivity relative to adults when detecting extended high frequencies (frequencies above 8 kHz; EHFs), as indicated by better pure tone thresholds. The impact that this increased hearing sensitivity to EHFs may have on children's speech recognition has not been established. One context in which EHF hearing may be particularly important for children is when recognizing speech in the presence of competing talkers. In the present study, we examined the extent to which school-age children (ages 5-17 years) with normal hearing were able to benefit from EHF cues when recognizing sentences in a two-talker speech masker. Two filtering conditions were tested: all stimuli were either full band or were low-pass filtered at 8 kHz to remove EHFs. Given that EHF energy emission in speech is highly dependent on head orientation of the talker (i.e., radiation becomes more directional with increasing frequency), two masker head angle conditions were tested: both co-located maskers were facing 45°, or both were facing 60° relative to the listener. The results demonstrated that regardless of age, children performed better when EHFs were present. In addition, a small change in masker head orientation also impacted performance, with better recognition at 60° compared to 45°. These findings suggest that EHF energy in the speech signal above 8 kHz is beneficial for children in complex listening situations. The magnitude of benefit from EHF cues and talker head orientation cues did not differ between children and adults. Therefore, while EHFs were beneficial for children as young as 5 years of age, children's generally better EHF hearing relative to adults did not provide any additional benefit.
虽然人类的可听频率范围大约在20赫兹到20千赫兹之间,但儿童在检测扩展高频(8千赫兹以上的频率;EHF)时相对于成人表现出更高的敏感度,这体现在更好的纯音阈值上。这种对EHF听力敏感度增加对儿童语音识别可能产生的影响尚未确定。EHF听力对儿童可能特别重要的一种情况是在有竞争说话者的情况下识别语音。在本研究中,我们考察了听力正常的学龄儿童(5至17岁)在双说话者语音掩蔽器中识别句子时能够从EHF线索中受益的程度。测试了两种滤波条件:所有刺激要么是全频段的,要么在8千赫兹处进行低通滤波以去除EHF。鉴于语音中的EHF能量发射高度依赖于说话者的头部方向(即随着频率增加辐射变得更具方向性),测试了两种掩蔽器头部角度条件:两个共置的掩蔽器相对于听众均面对45°,或者均面对60°。结果表明,无论年龄大小,当存在EHF时儿童的表现更好。此外,掩蔽器头部方向的微小变化也会影响表现,60°时的识别效果优于45°。这些发现表明,8千赫兹以上语音信号中的EHF能量在复杂听力情况下对儿童有益。儿童和成人从EHF线索和说话者头部方向线索中获得的益处程度没有差异。因此,虽然EHF对年仅5岁的儿童有益,但儿童相对于成人通常更好的EHF听力并没有提供任何额外的优势。