Abstract

The aim of the present study was to address how 43 normal-hearing (NH) and hearing-impaired (HI) listeners subjectively experienced the disturbance generated by four masker conditions (i.e., stationary noise, fluctuating noise, Swedish two-talker babble and English two-talker babble) while listening to speech in two target languages, i.e., Swedish (native) or English (non-native). The participants were asked to evaluate their noise-disturbance experience on a continuous scale from 0 to 10 immediately after having performed each listening condition. The data demonstrated a three-way interaction effect between target language, masker condition, and group (HI versus NH). The HI listeners experienced the Swedish-babble masker as significantly more disturbing for the native target language (Swedish) than for the non-native language (English). Additionally, this masker was significantly more disturbing than each of the other masker types during the perception of Swedish target speech. The NH listeners, on the other hand, indicated that the Swedish speech-masker was more disturbing than the stationary and the fluctuating noise-maskers for the perception of English target speech. The NH listeners perceived more disturbance from the speech maskers than the noise maskers. The HI listeners did not perceive the speech maskers as generally more disturbing than the noise maskers. However, they had particular difficulty with the perception of native speech masked by native babble, a common condition in daily-life listening conditions. These results suggest that the characteristics of the different maskers applied in the current study seem to affect the perceived disturbance differently in HI and NH listeners. There was no general difference in the perceived disturbance across conditions between the HI listeners and the NH listeners.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPeople seem to differ in their subjective evaluation of the impact of disturbing sounds on speech perception

  • Listening in noisy environments can be strenuous for one and all

  • The result indicates that the interaction effect between target language and masker type differed between the NH listeners and the HI listeners, as generally expected

Read more

Summary

Introduction

People seem to differ in their subjective evaluation of the impact of disturbing sounds on speech perception. This may be due to a variety of factors and knowledge of these factors provides insight into how individuals experience listening in challenging situations. Subjective ratings of masker disturbance hearing loss are more likely to have difficulties in difficult listening situations than NH individuals (McCoy et al, 2005; Tun et al, 2009; Zekveld et al, 2010, 2011). Other aspects that might affect the outcome are age and cognitive functions, as well as the characteristics of the target and the background maskers

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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