Abstract

This study investigated the relation between the intelligibility of conversational and clear speech produced by older and younger adults and (a) the acoustic profile of their speech (b) communication effectiveness. Speech samples from 30 talkers from the elderLUCID corpus were used: 10 young adults (YA), 10 older adults with normal hearing (OANH) and 10 older adults with presbycusis (OAHL). Samples were extracted from recordings made while participants completed a problem-solving cooperative task (diapix) with a conversational partner who could either hear them easily (NORM) or via a simulated hearing loss (HLS), which led talkers to naturally adopt a clear speaking style. In speech-in-noise listening experiments involving 21 young adult listeners, speech samples by OANH and OAHL were rated and perceived as less intelligible than those of YA talkers. HLS samples were more intelligible than NORM samples, with greater improvements in intelligibility across conditions seen for OA speech. The presence of presbycusis affected (a) the clear speech strategies adopted by OAHL talkers and (b) task effectiveness: OAHL talkers showed some adaptations consistent with an increase in vocal effort, and it took them significantly longer than the YA group to complete the diapix task. The relative energy in the 1–3 kHz frequency region of the long-term average spectrum was the feature that best predicted: (a) the intelligibility of speech samples, and (b) task transaction time in the HLS condition. Overall, our study suggests that spontaneous speech produced by older adults is less intelligible in babble noise, probably due to less energy present in the 1–3 kHz frequency range rich in acoustic cues. Even mild presbycusis in ‘healthy aged’ adults can affect the dynamic adaptations in speech that are beneficial for effective communication.

Highlights

  • The effect of aging and age-related hearing loss on speech understanding has been investigated in many studies

  • older adults with normal hearing (OANH) participants had normal hearing thresholds defined as an average hearing threshold of

  • For the repetition test, using the data organized per listener, a repeated-measures ANOVA was used to investigate the within-subject effects of talker group (YA, OANH, OAHL) and communicative condition (NORM, hearing loss (HLS)) on keyword intelligibility rates

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Summary

Introduction

The effect of aging and age-related hearing loss (presbycusis) on speech understanding has been investigated in many studies. Are older adults as able as younger adults to make ‘clear speech adaptations’ in challenging conditions? Are these affected by the hearing status of the older adult? These questions were examined in perception studies which used, as materials, naturally-elicited conversational and clear spontaneous speech produced by young and older adults during a problem-solving task. Data from the perception studies, speech acoustic analysis and task duration were used to investigate whether any acoustic characteristics were strong predictors of intelligibility and communication efficiency.

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