Abstract

Recognizing speech in adverse listening conditions is a significant cognitive, perceptual, and linguistic challenge, especially for children. Prior studies have yielded mixed results on the impact of bilingualism on speech perception in noise. Methodological variations across studies make it difficult to converge on a conclusion regarding the effect of bilingualism on speech-in-noise performance. Moreover, there is a dearth of speech-in-noise evidence for bilingual children who learn two languages simultaneously. The aim of the present study was to examine the extent to which various adverse listening conditions modulate differences in speech-in-noise performance between monolingual and simultaneous bilingual children. To that end, sentence recognition was assessed in twenty-four school-aged children (12 monolinguals; 12 simultaneous bilinguals, age of English acquisition ≤ 3 yrs.). We implemented a comprehensive speech-in-noise battery to examine recognition of English sentences across different modalities (audio-only, audiovisual), masker types (steady-state pink noise, two-talker babble), and a range of signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs; 0 to -16 dB). Results revealed no difference in performance between monolingual and simultaneous bilingual children across each combination of modality, masker, and SNR. Our findings suggest that when English age of acquisition and socioeconomic status is similar between groups, monolingual and bilingual children exhibit comparable speech-in-noise performance across a range of conditions analogous to everyday listening environments.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThe aim of the present study was to examine the extent to which various adverse listening conditions modulate differences in speech-in-noise performance between monolingual and simultaneous bilingual children

  • Speech communication rarely occurs in favorable listening conditions

  • We investigated the effect of simultaneous bilingualism through a comprehensive speech-in-noise battery that assessed sentence recognition across: different modalities [audio-only (AO), audiovisual (AV)], since monolingual and bilingual listeners have been found to rely on visual cues differently across the lifespan; and two masker types that distinctively engage cognitive processes

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of the present study was to examine the extent to which various adverse listening conditions modulate differences in speech-in-noise performance between monolingual and simultaneous bilingual children. The goal of the present study was to investigate the extent to which simultaneous bilingualism in school-age children impacts English sentence recognition in noise using a comprehensive battery that tests sentence recognition under various adverse listening conditions that differentially affect perceptual and cognitive processes. We aimed to assess whether performance differences between monolingual and simultaneous bilingual school-age children, if present, are restricted to certain listening conditions when socioeconomic status and age of English acquisition is similar between groups

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