Purpose: To analyze the 50% correct recognition data that were from the Wilson et al (this issue) study and that were obtained from 24 listeners with normal hearing; also to examine whether acoustic, phonetic, or lexical variables can predict recognition performance for monosyllabic words presented in speech-spectrum noise. Research Design: The specific variables are as follows: (a) acoustic variables (i.e., effective root-mean-square sound pressure level, duration), (b) phonetic variables (i.e., consonant features such as manner, place, and voicing for initial and final phonemes; vowel phonemes), and (c) lexical variables (i.e., word frequency, word familiarity, neighborhood density, neighborhood frequency). Data Collection and Analysis: T...
Copyright © 2015 Martine Coene et al.This is an open access article distributed under the Creative C...
Background: The Words-in-Noise Test (WIN) was developed as an instrument to quantify the ability of ...
Behavioural and psychophysical measurements in audiology are currently a challenging and resource co...
Objective: The main objective was to investigate the effect of linguistic abilities (lexical-access ...
Background: So that portions of the classic Miller, Heise, and Lichten (1951) study could be replica...
Objective: The purpose was to determine if speech-recognition performances were the same when the sp...
Established methods for predicting speech recognition in noise require knowledge of clean speech sig...
Purpose: To investigate the effects of vocabulary, working memory, age, semantic context, and sign...
Background: The Speech Recognition in Noise Test (SPRINT) is a word-recognition instrument that pres...
Two studies were conducted to evaluate how audibility influences speech recognition and measures of ...
Introduction: The purpose of the study was to analyze the differences in word recognition abilities ...
Studies concerning speech recognition in noise constitute a very broad spectrum of work including as...
Purpose: This thesis examines the effect of listener characteristics (i.e., cognition and vocabulary...
Masking noise and reverberation strongly influence speech intelligibility and decrease listening com...
Word recognition is based on the complex interplay of bottom up processing of acoustic input and cor...
Copyright © 2015 Martine Coene et al.This is an open access article distributed under the Creative C...
Background: The Words-in-Noise Test (WIN) was developed as an instrument to quantify the ability of ...
Behavioural and psychophysical measurements in audiology are currently a challenging and resource co...
Objective: The main objective was to investigate the effect of linguistic abilities (lexical-access ...
Background: So that portions of the classic Miller, Heise, and Lichten (1951) study could be replica...
Objective: The purpose was to determine if speech-recognition performances were the same when the sp...
Established methods for predicting speech recognition in noise require knowledge of clean speech sig...
Purpose: To investigate the effects of vocabulary, working memory, age, semantic context, and sign...
Background: The Speech Recognition in Noise Test (SPRINT) is a word-recognition instrument that pres...
Two studies were conducted to evaluate how audibility influences speech recognition and measures of ...
Introduction: The purpose of the study was to analyze the differences in word recognition abilities ...
Studies concerning speech recognition in noise constitute a very broad spectrum of work including as...
Purpose: This thesis examines the effect of listener characteristics (i.e., cognition and vocabulary...
Masking noise and reverberation strongly influence speech intelligibility and decrease listening com...
Word recognition is based on the complex interplay of bottom up processing of acoustic input and cor...
Copyright © 2015 Martine Coene et al.This is an open access article distributed under the Creative C...
Background: The Words-in-Noise Test (WIN) was developed as an instrument to quantify the ability of ...
Behavioural and psychophysical measurements in audiology are currently a challenging and resource co...