Abstract
Elderly people often complain that they struggle with consonant identification when listening to spoken language. In previous studies, we conducted several experiments, including identification tests for young and elderly listeners using /shi/-/chi/ (CV) and /ishi/-/ichi/ (VCV) continua. We also recorded production of such CV and VCV syllables. For the CV stimuli, confusion of /shi/ as /chi/ increased when the frication had a long rise time. The degree of confusion increased when auditory property degradation was observed such as threshold elevation in high frequency. In the VCV stimuli, confusion of /ichi/ as /ishi/ occurred for a long silent interval between the first V and C with auditory property degradation. In the present study, we analyzed the utterances of those CV and VCV syllables and measured the duration of frication and silent interval. The direction of the boundary shift in the perception of fricatives and affricates by auditory degradation was consistent with that of production. We found that degradation of auditory properties affects both perception and production of fricatives and affricates in elderly people.
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