Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions

Saea Kim, Sunmi Ma, Jihyeon Lee, Woojae Han Laboratory of Hearing and Technology, Division of Speech Pathology and Audiology, College of Natural Science, Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea Purpose: While evaluating the speech recognition ability of older adults, the present study aimed to analyze...

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Main Authors: Kim S, Ma S, Lee J, Han W
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2018-11-01
Series:Clinical Interventions in Aging
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/categorization-of-sentence-recognition-for-older-adults-under-noisy-an-peer-reviewed-article-CIA
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spelling doaj-571edf61a0334439a7a74587a36f4e282020-11-24T21:39:12ZengDove Medical PressClinical Interventions in Aging1178-19982018-11-01Volume 132225223541988Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditionsKim SMa SLee JHan WSaea Kim, Sunmi Ma, Jihyeon Lee, Woojae Han Laboratory of Hearing and Technology, Division of Speech Pathology and Audiology, College of Natural Science, Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea Purpose: While evaluating the speech recognition ability of older adults, the present study aimed to analyze their error types in parts of speech and find error patterns under various conditions of background noise level and speed of speech. Methods: Twenty older adults with normal hearing for their age (NHiA) and 20 older adults with sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) participated. Their cognitive function was screened as within the normal range (mini-mental state examination scores >25). The SNHL listeners were divided into high performers (SNHL-H; n=12) and low performers (SNHL-L; n=8), based on their achieving word recognition scores above or below 70%, respectively. A sentence recognition test was conducted at four levels of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR; eg, no noise, +6, +3, 0 dB) and four conditions of time alteration (eg, 30% and 15% of compression and expansion) at the most comfortable level for each participant. Results: As expected, the three groups showed that the error percentage increased in sentence recognition as either the SNR decreased or the speech rate became faster. Interestingly, a larger performance difference was found between the SNHL-H and SNHL-L groups in the condition of time alteration than in that of background noise. Among the parts of speech, nouns presented the highest error scores for all participants regardless of degree of listening difficulty. The noun errors of the three groups mainly consisted of no response and fail patterns, but substitution and omission were identified as the third pattern of noun error for background noise and fast speech, respectively. Conclusion: Deterioration of speech recognition from the hearing threshold and supra-threshold auditory processing was seen in the elderly in difficult listening environments such as background noise and time alteration. Although different group performance ran across the eight experimental conditions, the robustness of noun errors and the error patterns were very similar, which might be extended to a possible clinical application of aural rehabilitation for the elderly population. Keywords: age-related perceptual error, sentence perception, noun error, error pattern, distracting listening conditionhttps://www.dovepress.com/categorization-of-sentence-recognition-for-older-adults-under-noisy-an-peer-reviewed-article-CIAsentence recognitionelderlynoun errorsignal-to-noise ratiostime alteration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kim S
Ma S
Lee J
Han W
spellingShingle Kim S
Ma S
Lee J
Han W
Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions
Clinical Interventions in Aging
sentence recognition
elderly
noun error
signal-to-noise ratios
time alteration
author_facet Kim S
Ma S
Lee J
Han W
author_sort Kim S
title Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions
title_short Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions
title_full Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions
title_fullStr Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions
title_full_unstemmed Categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions
title_sort categorization of sentence recognition for older adults under noisy and time-altered conditions
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Clinical Interventions in Aging
issn 1178-1998
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Saea Kim, Sunmi Ma, Jihyeon Lee, Woojae Han Laboratory of Hearing and Technology, Division of Speech Pathology and Audiology, College of Natural Science, Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea Purpose: While evaluating the speech recognition ability of older adults, the present study aimed to analyze their error types in parts of speech and find error patterns under various conditions of background noise level and speed of speech. Methods: Twenty older adults with normal hearing for their age (NHiA) and 20 older adults with sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) participated. Their cognitive function was screened as within the normal range (mini-mental state examination scores >25). The SNHL listeners were divided into high performers (SNHL-H; n=12) and low performers (SNHL-L; n=8), based on their achieving word recognition scores above or below 70%, respectively. A sentence recognition test was conducted at four levels of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR; eg, no noise, +6, +3, 0 dB) and four conditions of time alteration (eg, 30% and 15% of compression and expansion) at the most comfortable level for each participant. Results: As expected, the three groups showed that the error percentage increased in sentence recognition as either the SNR decreased or the speech rate became faster. Interestingly, a larger performance difference was found between the SNHL-H and SNHL-L groups in the condition of time alteration than in that of background noise. Among the parts of speech, nouns presented the highest error scores for all participants regardless of degree of listening difficulty. The noun errors of the three groups mainly consisted of no response and fail patterns, but substitution and omission were identified as the third pattern of noun error for background noise and fast speech, respectively. Conclusion: Deterioration of speech recognition from the hearing threshold and supra-threshold auditory processing was seen in the elderly in difficult listening environments such as background noise and time alteration. Although different group performance ran across the eight experimental conditions, the robustness of noun errors and the error patterns were very similar, which might be extended to a possible clinical application of aural rehabilitation for the elderly population. Keywords: age-related perceptual error, sentence perception, noun error, error pattern, distracting listening condition
topic sentence recognition
elderly
noun error
signal-to-noise ratios
time alteration
url https://www.dovepress.com/categorization-of-sentence-recognition-for-older-adults-under-noisy-an-peer-reviewed-article-CIA
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