Abstract

Today, millions of standardized English as a foreign language proficiency tests are administered globally each year. A large portion of this is conducted as a paper-based test in which the listening section is commonly delivered through loudspeakers to groups of test takers, a method in which the audio signals are exposed to the acoustic tendencies of each particular venue. As it is well-established in the literature that non-native listeners are more susceptible to adverse listening conditions compared to their native counterparts, there is a need for an objective examination of the acoustic quality of such environments. This study examined the speech transmission index for public address systems (STIPA) for three types of sound sources (wall-mounted speakers, radio cassette player, and amplified speaker) and reverberation time (RT) in 10 unoccupied classrooms commonly used as test rooms at a university in Japan. The results revealed that STI was found to be statistically significantly different for the amplified speaker compared to both or one other sound source in eight out of 10 rooms. The amplified speaker also recorded the highest STI among the three sound sources in eight out of 10 rooms and the most rooms with STI entirely above 0.66, a minimum target value prescribed in IEC 60268–16:2020 as exhibiting high speech intelligibility. Additionally, ≥ 0.66 STI was consistently observed in rooms with RT0.5-2kHz≤ 0.7 s. Further observations are discussed to better understand the current conditions under which these tests are administered

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call