Older adults' recognition of medical terminology in hospital noise.

IF 3.4 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
Tessa Bent, Melissa Baese-Berk, Brian Puckett, Erica Ryherd, Sydney Perry, Natalie A Manley
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Abstract

Word identification accuracy is modulated by many factors including linguistic characteristics of words (frequent vs. infrequent), listening environment (noisy vs. quiet), and listener-related differences (older vs. younger). Nearly, all studies investigating these factors use high-familiarity words and noise signals that are either energetic maskers (e.g., white noise) or informational maskers composed of competing talkers (e.g., multitalker babble). Here, we expand on these findings by examining younger and older listeners' speech-in-noise perception for words varying in both frequency and familiarity within a simulated hospital noise that has important non-speech information. The method was inspired by the real-world challenges aging patients can face in understanding less familiar medical terminology used by healthcare professionals in noisy hospital environments. Word familiarity data from older and young adults were collected for 800 medically related terms. Familiarity ratings were highly correlated between the two age groups. Older adults' transcription accuracy for sentences with medical terminology that vary in their familiarity and frequency was assessed across four listening conditions: hospital noise, speech-shaped noise, amplitude-modulated speech-shaped noise, and quiet. Listeners were less accurate in noise conditions than in a quiet condition and were more impacted by hospital noise than either speech-shaped noise. Sentences with low-familiarity and low-frequency medical words combined with hospital noise were particularly detrimental for older adults compared to younger adults. The results impact our theoretical understanding of speech perception in noise and highlight real-world consequences of older adults' difficulties with speech-in-noise and specifically noise containing competing, non-speech information.

老年人对医院噪声中医学术语的识别。
单词识别的准确性受到许多因素的调节,包括单词的语言特征(频繁与不频繁),听力环境(嘈杂与安静)以及听者相关的差异(年龄与年龄)。几乎所有调查这些因素的研究都使用高度熟悉的单词和噪声信号,这些信号要么是能量掩蔽物(如白噪声),要么是由相互竞争的说话者组成的信息掩蔽物(如多说话者的胡言乱语)。在这里,我们对这些发现进行了扩展,通过检查年轻和年长的听众在模拟的医院噪声中对具有重要非言语信息的单词的频率和熟悉度变化的语音感知。该方法的灵感来自于现实世界中老年患者在嘈杂的医院环境中理解医疗专业人员使用的不太熟悉的医学术语时可能面临的挑战。从老年人和年轻人中收集了800个医学相关术语的词汇熟悉度数据。熟悉度评分在两个年龄组之间高度相关。老年人对医学术语句子的转录准确性在四种听力条件下进行了评估:医院噪音、语音噪音、调幅语音噪音和安静。听者在嘈杂的环境下比在安静的环境下更不准确,而医院的噪音比两种语音噪音更容易影响听者的判断。与年轻人相比,低熟悉度和低频率医学词汇加上医院噪音的句子对老年人尤其有害。研究结果影响了我们对噪声环境下言语感知的理论理解,并突出了老年人在噪声环境下言语感知困难的现实后果,特别是包含竞争性非言语信息的噪声。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
7.30%
发文量
96
审稿时长
25 weeks
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