Abstract

Regression and principal components analyses were employed to study the relationship between 30 aerodynamic speech parameters and the speech intelligibility of 40 severely to profoundly hearing-impaired speakers. Regression analysis on the original 30 aerodynamic variables revealed that speech intelligibility was predicted by a cognate-pair voice onset-time difference measure and a measure of the stability of the volume-velocity rise time. Principal components analysis of the 30 independent variables derived seven factors that accounted for 84.3% of the variance in the original 30 parameters. Subsequent regression analysis using the seven factors as predictor variables revealed four factors with independent relationships to speech intelligibility. These included a factor that reflected cognate-pair voice onset-time distinctions, a factor that reflected cognate-pair peak volume-velocity distinctions, and two other factors, which reflected production stability of temporal distinctions between cognate pair members.

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