复杂情况下的沟通:构音障碍和感音神经性听力损失对日常嘈杂环境下言语感知的综合影响。

IF 2.2
Sarah E Yoho, Eric W Healy, Tyson S Barrett, Stephanie A Borrie
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:在这里,我们研究了在嘈杂的日常环境中,当说话者有构音障碍而听者有听力损失时,在未被充分认识的、高度复杂的、但涉及两种临床人群的真实交流场景中,可理解性是如何受到影响的。作为第二个目标,我们研究了现代降噪的潜力,以减轻听力损失的听众试图理解有构音障碍的说话者时的噪音负担。方法:13名成年感音神经性听力损失患者在安静、噪音和降低噪音三种处理条件下听和转录困难言语。将SNHL听者的可理解性评分与先前报道的从无听力损失的成年人收集的数据进行比较(Borrie et al., 2023)。结果:SNHL的听者在听有构音障碍的说话者讲话时的表现明显差于正常听力的听者——当背景噪音存在时,这种可理解性劣势会加剧。然而,研究也发现,一种基于时间频率的降噪技术能够有效地将听力损失的听众在噪音环境下的发音困难恢复到安静环境下的大致水平。结论:研究结果强调了当背景噪音存在时,由患有构音障碍的说话者和听力损失的听者组成的交流双元组的可理解性负担。鉴于构音障碍和听力损失的病因,以及在许多日常交流环境中存在的噪音,这种情况并不罕见。因此,这些结果是理解沟通障碍相互作用时所经历的挑战的重要的第一步。降噪技术可以减轻大部分噪音负担的发现为寻求管理与两个临床人群的沟通的研究提供了一个有希望的未来方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Communication in Complex Situations: The Combined Influence of Dysarthria and Sensorineural Hearing Loss on Speech Perception in Everyday Noisy Environments.

Purpose: Here, we investigated how intelligibility is impacted in underappreciated, highly complex, but real-world communication scenarios involving two clinical populations-when the speaker has dysarthria and the listener has hearing loss, in noisy everyday environments. As a second aim, we examined the potential for modern noise reduction to mitigate the noise burden when listeners with hearing loss are attempting to understand a speaker with dysarthria.

Method: Thirteen adults with sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) listened and transcribed dysarthric speech under three processing conditions: quiet, noise, and noise reduced. The intelligibility scores of listeners with SNHL were compared with previously reported data collected from adults without hearing loss (Borrie et al., 2023).

Results: Listeners with SNHL performed significantly poorer than typical-hearing listeners when listening to speech produced by a speaker with dysarthria-an intelligibility disadvantage that was exacerbated when background noise was present. However, it was also found that a time-frequency-based noise reduction technique was able to effectively restore the intelligibility of dysarthric speech in noise to approximate levels in quiet for listeners with hearing loss.

Conclusions: The results highlight the substantial intelligibility burden placed upon a communication dyad consisting of a speaker with dysarthria and a listener with hearing loss, when background noise is present. Given the etiologies of dysarthria and hearing loss, and presence of noise in many everyday communication environments, this scenario is not uncommon. As such, these results are an important first step toward understanding the challenges experienced when communication disorders interact. The finding that noise reduction techniques can mitigate much of the noise burden provides a promising future direction for research that seeks to manage communication with two clinical populations.

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