青少年自闭症患者的隐语识别与自我报告的功能性听力。

IF 2.2
Peter A Wasiuk, Barbara A Cook, Julia R Irwin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:自闭症成人在不利的听力环境中不断报告言语理解困难,这可能与社会沟通和参与的差异有关。研究自闭症成人的屏蔽语音识别是有限的,特别是在具有高度信息屏蔽的竞争语音背景中。本研究研究了自闭症年轻人的语音中语音和语音噪声识别,并评估了自我报告的功能性听力能力和听力相关疲劳。方法:对听力正常的自闭症青年(n = 20)和非自闭症青年(n = 20)进行蒙面语音识别评价。使用语义有意义或异常的目标句子,自适应地测量两说话者语音和语音形状噪声的语音接收阈值。使用成人语音、空间和听力质量量表和范德比尔特疲劳量表评估功能性听力能力和听力相关疲劳。采用社会反应性量表(第二版)对自闭症特征和社会交际经历进行量化。结果:自闭症成年人的语音识别能力明显低于非自闭症同龄人,而语音识别能力在两组之间没有差异。自闭症患者在日常生活中的功能性听力困难和听力相关疲劳方面的差异显著较高。自闭症特征强烈预测两组的功能性听力能力和听力相关疲劳。结论:自闭症青年在日常生活中存在客观的语中言语识别困难,这与听力挑战相对应。孤独症特征和社会交流经验对听力正常的孤独症和非孤独症青年报告的功能性听力能力有预测作用。这里观察到的语中语识别困难可能会放大自闭症成人的社会沟通挑战。未来的工作必须优先考虑提高对自闭症听力差异的认识。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Masked-Speech Recognition and Self-Reported Functional Listening in Autistic Young Adults.

Purpose: Autistic adults consistently report difficulties understanding speech in adverse listening environments, which may be related to differences in social communication and participation. Research examining masked-speech recognition in autistic adults is limited, particularly in competing speech backgrounds with high degrees of informational masking. This work characterizes speech-in-speech and speech-in-noise recognition in young adults on the autism spectrum, as well as evaluates self-reported functional listening abilities and listening-related fatigue.

Method: Masked-speech recognition was evaluated in both autistic (n = 20) and non-autistic (n = 20) young adults with normal hearing. Speech reception thresholds were adaptively measured in two-talker speech and speech-shaped noise using target sentences that were either semantically meaningful or anomalous. Functional listening abilities and listening-related fatigue were assessed using the Speech, Spatial, and Qualities of Hearing Scale and the Vanderbilt Fatigue Scale for Adults. Autism characteristics and social communication experiences were quantified using the Social Responsiveness Scale-Second Edition.

Results: Autistic adults displayed significantly poorer speech-in-speech recognition than their non-autistic peers, while speech-in-noise recognition did not differ between groups. Functional listening difficulties in daily life and listening-related fatigue were significantly higher for autistic participants. Autism characteristics strongly predicted functional listening abilities and listening-related fatigue in both groups.

Conclusions: Autistic young adults experience objective speech-in-speech recognition difficulties that correspond with listening challenges in daily life. Autism characteristics and social communication experiences predict functional listening abilities reported by both autistic and non-autistic young adults with normal hearing. Speech-in-speech recognition difficulties observed here may amplify social communication challenges for adults on the autism spectrum. Future work must prioritize improved awareness of autistic listening differences.

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