Compartir
Título
Factors that can affect divided speech intelligibility
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Divided listening
Listening effort
Speech recognition
Clasificación UNESCO
2490.01 Neurofisiología
2411.13 Fisiología de la Audición
3314.99 Otras
Fecha de publicación
2024-01
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Fumero, M. J., Marrufo-Pérez, M. I., Eustaquio-Martín, A., y Lopez-Poveda, E. A. (2024). Factors that can affect divided speech intelligibility. Hearing Research, 441, 108917. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2023.108917
Resumen
[EN] Previous studies have shown that in challenging listening situations, people find it hard to equally divide their attention between two simultaneous talkers and tend to favor one talker over the other. The aim here was to investigate whether talker onset/offset, sex and location determine the favored talker. Fifteen people with normal hearing were asked to recognize as many words as possible from two sentences uttered by two talkers located at single bond45° and +45° azimuth, respectively. The sentences were from the same corpus, were time-centered and had equal sound level. In Conditions 1 and 2, the talkers had different sexes (male at +45°), sentence duration was not controlled for, and sentences were presented at 65 and 35 dB SPL, respectively. Listeners favored the male over the female talker, even more so at 35 dB SPL (62 % vs 43 % word recognition, respectively) than at 65 dB SPL (74 % vs 64 %, respectively). The greater asymmetry in intelligibility at the lower level supports that divided listening is harder and more ‘asymmetric’ in challenging acoustic scenarios. Listeners continued to favor the male talker when the experiment was repeated with sentences of equal average duration for the two talkers (Condition 3). This suggests that the earlier onset or later offset of male sentences (52 ms on average) was not the reason for the asymmetric intelligibility in Conditions 1 or 2. When the location of the talkers was switched (Condition 4) or the two talkers were the same woman (Condition 5), listeners continued to favor the talker to their right albeit non-significantly. Altogether, results confirm that in hard divided listening situations, listeners tend to favor the talker to their right. This preference is not affected by talker onset/offset delays less than 52 ms on average. Instead, the preference seems to be modulated by the voice characteristics of the talkers.
URI
ISSN
0378-5955
DOI
10.1016/j.heares.2023.108917
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones













