Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational Masking

The aims of the present study were to examine whether familiarity with a masker improves word recognition in speech masking situations and whether there are age-related differences in the effects of masker cuing. Thirty-two older listeners (range = 59–74; mean age = 66.41 years) with high-frequency...

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Main Authors: Tianquan Feng, Qingrong Chen, Zhongdang Xiao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01922/full
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spelling doaj-5a41dab1127c4aefb66ae18e8234d3b12020-11-25T02:30:52ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782018-10-01910.3389/fpsyg.2018.01922350150Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational MaskingTianquan Feng0Tianquan Feng1Qingrong Chen2Zhongdang Xiao3College of Teacher Education, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Bioelectronics, School of Biological Science and Medical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, ChinaSchool of Psychology, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Bioelectronics, School of Biological Science and Medical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing, ChinaThe aims of the present study were to examine whether familiarity with a masker improves word recognition in speech masking situations and whether there are age-related differences in the effects of masker cuing. Thirty-two older listeners (range = 59–74; mean age = 66.41 years) with high-frequency hearing loss and 32 younger normal-hearing listeners (range = 21–28; mean age = 23.73) participated in this study, all of whom spoke Chinese as their first language. Two experiments were conducted and 16 younger and 16 older listeners were used in each experiment. The masking speech with different content from target speech with syntactically correct but semantically meaningless was a continuous recording of meaningless Chinese sentences spoken by two talkers. The masker level was adjusted to produce signal-to-masker ratios of -12, -8, -4, and 0 dB for the younger participants and -8, -4, 0, and 4 dB for the older participants. Under masker-priming conditions, a priming sentence, spoken by the masker talkers, was presented in quiet three times before a target sentence was presented together with a masker sentence 4 s later. In Experiment 1, using same-sentence masker-priming (identical to the masker sentence), the masker-priming improved the identification of the target sentence for both age groups compared to when no priming was provided. However, the amount of masking release was less in the older adults than in the younger adults. In Experiment 2, two kinds of primes were considered: same-sentence masker-priming, and different-sentence masker-priming (different from the masker sentence in content for each keyword). The results of Experiment 2 showed that both kinds of primes improved the identification of the targets for both age groups. However, the release from speech masking in both priming conditions was less in the older adults than in the younger adults, and the release from speech masking in both age groups was greater with same-sentence masker-priming than with different-sentence masker-priming. These results suggest that both the voice and content cues of a masker could be used to release target speech from maskers in noisy listening conditions. Furthermore, there was an age-related decline in masker-priming-induced release from speech masking.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01922/fullspeech recognitioninformational maskingmasker cuingage effectsvoice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tianquan Feng
Tianquan Feng
Qingrong Chen
Zhongdang Xiao
spellingShingle Tianquan Feng
Tianquan Feng
Qingrong Chen
Zhongdang Xiao
Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational Masking
Frontiers in Psychology
speech recognition
informational masking
masker cuing
age effects
voice
author_facet Tianquan Feng
Tianquan Feng
Qingrong Chen
Zhongdang Xiao
author_sort Tianquan Feng
title Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational Masking
title_short Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational Masking
title_full Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational Masking
title_fullStr Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational Masking
title_full_unstemmed Age-Related Differences in the Effects of Masker Cuing on Releasing Chinese Speech From Informational Masking
title_sort age-related differences in the effects of masker cuing on releasing chinese speech from informational masking
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2018-10-01
description The aims of the present study were to examine whether familiarity with a masker improves word recognition in speech masking situations and whether there are age-related differences in the effects of masker cuing. Thirty-two older listeners (range = 59–74; mean age = 66.41 years) with high-frequency hearing loss and 32 younger normal-hearing listeners (range = 21–28; mean age = 23.73) participated in this study, all of whom spoke Chinese as their first language. Two experiments were conducted and 16 younger and 16 older listeners were used in each experiment. The masking speech with different content from target speech with syntactically correct but semantically meaningless was a continuous recording of meaningless Chinese sentences spoken by two talkers. The masker level was adjusted to produce signal-to-masker ratios of -12, -8, -4, and 0 dB for the younger participants and -8, -4, 0, and 4 dB for the older participants. Under masker-priming conditions, a priming sentence, spoken by the masker talkers, was presented in quiet three times before a target sentence was presented together with a masker sentence 4 s later. In Experiment 1, using same-sentence masker-priming (identical to the masker sentence), the masker-priming improved the identification of the target sentence for both age groups compared to when no priming was provided. However, the amount of masking release was less in the older adults than in the younger adults. In Experiment 2, two kinds of primes were considered: same-sentence masker-priming, and different-sentence masker-priming (different from the masker sentence in content for each keyword). The results of Experiment 2 showed that both kinds of primes improved the identification of the targets for both age groups. However, the release from speech masking in both priming conditions was less in the older adults than in the younger adults, and the release from speech masking in both age groups was greater with same-sentence masker-priming than with different-sentence masker-priming. These results suggest that both the voice and content cues of a masker could be used to release target speech from maskers in noisy listening conditions. Furthermore, there was an age-related decline in masker-priming-induced release from speech masking.
topic speech recognition
informational masking
masker cuing
age effects
voice
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01922/full
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