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Article
Listening Effort by Native and Nonnative Listeners Due to Noise, Reverberation, and Talker Foreign Accent During English Speech Perception
J. Speech, Language, and Hearing Research (2019)
  • Zhao Peng
  • Lily M Wang, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Abstract
Understanding speech in complex realistic acoustic environments requires effort. In everyday listening situations, speech quality is often degraded due to adverse acoustics, such as excessive background noise level (BNL) and reverberation time (RT), or talker characteristics such as foreign accent (Mattys, Davis, Bradlow, & Scott, 2012). In addition to factors affecting the quality of the input acoustic signals, listeners' individual characteristics such as language abilities can also make it more difficult and effortful to understand speech. Based on the Framework for Understanding Effortful Listening (Pichora-Fuller et al., 2016), factors such as adverse acoustics, talker accent, and listener language abilities can all contribute to increasing listening effort. In this study, using both a dual-task paradigm and a self-report questionnaire, we seek to understand listening effort in a wide range of realistic classroom acoustic conditions as well as varying talker accent and listener English proficiency. Results show that adverse acoustics required more effortful listening as measured subjectively with a self-report NASA TLX. This subjective scale was more sensitive than a dual task that involved speech comprehension, which was beyond sentence recall. It was better at capturing the negative impacts on listening effort from acoustic factors (i.e., both BNL and RT), talker accent, and listener language abilities.
Keywords
  • background noise,
  • reverberation time,
  • non-native listeners
Publication Date
April, 2019
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1044/2018_JSLHR-H-17-0423
Citation Information
Zhao Peng and Lily M Wang. "Listening Effort by Native and Nonnative Listeners Due to Noise, Reverberation, and Talker Foreign Accent During English Speech Perception" J. Speech, Language, and Hearing Research Vol. 62 (2019) p. 1068 - 1081
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/lilymwang/73/