Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials

The purpose of this study was to develop digitally recorded speech audiometry materials in the Japanese language to evaluate Speech Reception Threshold (SRT) and speech discrimination. Trisyllabic words were used to evaluate the SRT and bisyllabic words were used for speech discrimination. Words wer...

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Main Author: Mangum, Tanya Crawford
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2005
Subjects:
SRT
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/616
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1615&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-16152019-05-16T03:06:23Z Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials Mangum, Tanya Crawford The purpose of this study was to develop digitally recorded speech audiometry materials in the Japanese language to evaluate Speech Reception Threshold (SRT) and speech discrimination. Trisyllabic words were used to evaluate the SRT and bisyllabic words were used for speech discrimination. Words were recorded by one native female talker and one native male talker who were judged as having standard Japanese dialects. Twenty native Japanese speakers between the ages of 20 and 32 were used as subjects to evaluate 69 trisyllabic words across 13 different intensity levels. The 25 trisyllabic words with the steepest psychometric function (%/dB) were selected for inclusion in the final CD. The final trisyllabic words were digitally adjusted so that the threshold of each word was equal to the mean PTA (3.42 dB HL) of all the subjects. The mean psychometric function (%/dB) at 50% for the trisyllabic words was 9.6 %/dB for the male talker and 7.7 %/dB for the female talker. The same 20 subjects were also used to evaluate 240 bisyllabic words across 10 different intensity levels. A logistic regression was used to obtain regression slopes for each of the 240 words. The 200 bisyllabic words with the steepest slope were selected for inclusion in the final CD. Four lists of 50 words each and eight half-lists of 25 words each were created from the selected bisyllabic words. A chi-square statistic revealed no significant differences among the lists or half-lists. The mean psychometric function at 50% for the bisyllabic lists and half-lists was 5.9 %/dB for the male talker and 5.2 %/dB for the female talker. 2005-05-24T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/616 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1615&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive speech audiometry speech reception threshold SRT speech discrimination Japanese bisyllabic trisyllabic auditory word recognition digital digitally recorded Communication Sciences and Disorders
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic speech audiometry
speech reception threshold
SRT
speech discrimination
Japanese
bisyllabic
trisyllabic
auditory word recognition
digital
digitally recorded
Communication Sciences and Disorders
spellingShingle speech audiometry
speech reception threshold
SRT
speech discrimination
Japanese
bisyllabic
trisyllabic
auditory word recognition
digital
digitally recorded
Communication Sciences and Disorders
Mangum, Tanya Crawford
Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials
description The purpose of this study was to develop digitally recorded speech audiometry materials in the Japanese language to evaluate Speech Reception Threshold (SRT) and speech discrimination. Trisyllabic words were used to evaluate the SRT and bisyllabic words were used for speech discrimination. Words were recorded by one native female talker and one native male talker who were judged as having standard Japanese dialects. Twenty native Japanese speakers between the ages of 20 and 32 were used as subjects to evaluate 69 trisyllabic words across 13 different intensity levels. The 25 trisyllabic words with the steepest psychometric function (%/dB) were selected for inclusion in the final CD. The final trisyllabic words were digitally adjusted so that the threshold of each word was equal to the mean PTA (3.42 dB HL) of all the subjects. The mean psychometric function (%/dB) at 50% for the trisyllabic words was 9.6 %/dB for the male talker and 7.7 %/dB for the female talker. The same 20 subjects were also used to evaluate 240 bisyllabic words across 10 different intensity levels. A logistic regression was used to obtain regression slopes for each of the 240 words. The 200 bisyllabic words with the steepest slope were selected for inclusion in the final CD. Four lists of 50 words each and eight half-lists of 25 words each were created from the selected bisyllabic words. A chi-square statistic revealed no significant differences among the lists or half-lists. The mean psychometric function at 50% for the bisyllabic lists and half-lists was 5.9 %/dB for the male talker and 5.2 %/dB for the female talker.
author Mangum, Tanya Crawford
author_facet Mangum, Tanya Crawford
author_sort Mangum, Tanya Crawford
title Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials
title_short Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials
title_full Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials
title_fullStr Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials
title_full_unstemmed Performance Intensity Functions for Digitally Recorded Japanese Speech Audiometry Materials
title_sort performance intensity functions for digitally recorded japanese speech audiometry materials
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2005
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/616
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1615&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT mangumtanyacrawford performanceintensityfunctionsfordigitallyrecordedjapanesespeechaudiometrymaterials
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