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Journal ArticleDOI

Normal-Hearing and Hearing- Impaired Subjects' Ability to Just Follow Conversation in Competing Speech, Reversed Speech, and Noise Backgrounds

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TLDR
The performance on a conversation-following task by 24 hearing-impaired persons was compared with that of 24 matched controls with normal hearing in the presence of three background noises, and the prediction about lipreading was confirmed.
Abstract
The performance on a conversation-following task by 24 hearing-impaired persons was compared with that of 24 matched controls with normal hearing in the presence of three background noises: (a) speech-spectrum random noise, (b) a male voice, and (c) the male voice played in reverse. The subjects' task was to readjust the sound level of a female voice (signal), every time the signal voice was attenuated, to the subjective level at which it was just possible to understand what was being said. To assess the benefit of lipreading, half of the material was presented audiovisually and half auditorily only. It was predicted that background speech would have a greater masking effect than reversed speech, which would in turn have a lesser masking effect than random noise. It was predicted that hearing-impaired subjects would perform more poorly than the normal-hearing controls in a background of speech. The influence of lipreading was expected to be constant across groups and conditions. The results showed that the hearing-impaired subjects were equally affected by the three background noises and that normal-hearing persons were less affected by the background speech than by noise. The performance of the normal-hearing persons was superior to that of the hearing-impaired subjects. The prediction about lipreading was confirmed. The results were explained in terms of the reduced temporal resolution by the hearing-impaired subjects.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Ease of Language Understanding (ELU) model: Theoretical, empirical, and clinical advances

TL;DR: This paper examines the Ease of Language Understanding model in light of new behavioral and neural findings concerning the role of working memory capacity (WMC) in uni-modal and bimodal language processing.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of perceived spatial separation in the unmasking of speech.

TL;DR: This study investigated whether the distinct and separate localization of speech and interference provides any perceptual advantage that, due to the precedence effect, is not degraded by reflections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognition counts: A working memory system for ease of language understanding (ELU)

TL;DR: The present paper focuses on four aspects of the model which have led to the current, updated version: the language generality assumption; the mismatch assumption; chronological age; and the episodic buffer function of rapid, automatic multimodal binding of phonology (RAMBPHO).
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Spatial release from informational masking in speech recognition.

TL;DR: Three experiments were conducted to determine the extent to which perceived separation of speech and interference improves speech recognition in the free field, and indicated that the advantage of perceived separation is not limited to conditions where the interfering speech is understandable.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Prospective Study of Some Effects of Aircraft Noise on Cognitive Performance in Schoolchildren

TL;DR: Mediational analyses suggest that poorer reading was not mediated by speech perception, and that impaired recall was in part mediated by reading.
References
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Book

Modularity of mind

Book

Perception and communication

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a transition between behaviourist learning theory and the modern information processing or cognitive approach to perception and communication skills, and provide a principal starting point for theoretical and experimental work on selective attention.
Journal ArticleDOI

The modularity of mind

Journal ArticleDOI

The motor theory of speech perception revised

TL;DR: A motor theory of speech perception, initially proposed to account for results of early experiments with synthetic speech, is now extensively revised to accommodate recent findings, and to relate the assumptions of the theory to those that might be made about other perceptual modes.
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