Time is of the essence in speech perception! Get it fast, or think about it

Detta är en avhandling från Linköping : Linköping University Electronic Press

Sammanfattning: The present thesis examined the extent to which background noise influences the isolation point (IP, the shortest time from the onset of speech stimulus required for correct identification of that speech stimulus) and accuracy in identification of different types of speech stimuli (consonants, words, and final words in high-predictable [HP] and low-predictable [LP] sentences). These speech stimuli were presented in different modalities of presentation (auditory, visual, and audiovisual) to young normal-hearing listeners (Papers 1, 2, and 5). In addition, the present thesis studied under what conditions cognitive resources were explicitly demanded in identification of different types of speech stimuli (Papers 1 and 2). Further, elderly hearing-aid (EHA) users and elderly normal-hearing (ENH) listeners were compared with regard to the IPs, accuracy, and under what conditions explicit cognitive resources were demanded in identification of auditory speech stimuli in silence (Paper 3). The results showed that background noise resulted in later IPs and reduced the accuracy for the identification of different types of speech stimuli in both modalities of speech presentation. Explicit cognitive resources were demanded in identification of speech stimuli in the auditory-only modality, under the noisy condition, and in the absence of a prior semantic context. In addition, audiovisual presentation of speech stimuli resulted in earlier IPs and more accurate identification of speech stimuli than auditory presentation. Furthermore, a pre-exposure to audiovisual speech stimuli resulted in better auditory speech-in-noise identification than an exposure to auditory-only speech stimuli (Papers 2 and 4). When comparing EHA users and ENH individuals, the EHA users showed inferior performance in the identification of consonants, words, and final words in LP sentences (in terms of IP). In terms of accuracy, the EHA users demonstrated inferior performance only in the identification of consonants and words. Only the identification of consonants and words demanded explicit cognitive resources in the EHA users. Theoretical predictions and clinical implications were discussed.

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