Abstract

This paper evaluates a novel high variability phonetic training paradigm that involves presenting spoken words in adverse conditions. The effectiveness, generalizability, and longevity of this high variability phonetic training in adverse conditions was evaluated using English phoneme contrasts in three experiments with Malaysian multilinguals. Adverse conditions were created by presenting spoken words against background multi-talker babble. In Experiment 1, the adverse condition level was set at a fixed level throughout the training and in Experiment 2 the adverse condition level was determined for each participant before training using an adaptive staircase procedure. To explore the effectiveness and sustainability of the training, phonemic discrimination ability was assessed before and immediately after training (Experiments 1 and 2) and 6 months after training (Experiment 3). Generalization of training was evaluated within and across phonemic contrasts using trained and untrained stimuli. Results revealed significant perceptual improvements after just three 20-minute training sessions and these improvements were maintained after 6 months. The training benefits also generalized from trained to untrained stimuli. Crucially, perceptual improvements were significantly larger when the adverse conditions were adapted before each training session than when it was set at a fixed level. As the training improvements observed here are markedly larger than those reported in the literature, this indicates that the individualized phonetic training regime in adaptive adverse conditions (HVPT-AAC) is highly effective at improving speech perception.

Highlights

  • Non-native English speakers have often difficulties discriminating phonemic contrasts that involve phoneme categories that are not present in their native language

  • The longevity of training in adverse conditions were investigated in Experiment 3. In this experiment we investigated whether perceptual training in two different levels of adverse conditions modulated the training results of non-native speakers, and whether the training generalized to untrained stimuli and untrained contrasts

  • The mean percentage of correct identification was calculated for each phonemic contrast in the pre- and post-tests respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Non-native English speakers have often difficulties discriminating phonemic contrasts that involve phoneme categories that are not present in their native language. Participants identified all stimuli with a considerably high accuracy in the pre-test (mean 72.8%), the HVPT training in adverse conditions was able to further improve their overall perceptual performance by 3.0%.

Results
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