Abstract

In a previous study, intelligibility rankings of American English (AE) talkers were different for native and non‐native listeners [Bent, et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 122, 3016 (2007)]. To equate overall performance, the native and non‐native listeners were tested at two different signal‐to‐noise ratios (SNRs). Therefore, the differences in intelligibility rankings between the two listener groups may have been affected by the listener’s native language and differences in SNR. The current study explored this issue by testing across‐talker differences in AE vowel intelligibility for AE listeners and Korean listeners learning AE as a second language. Listeners heard recordings of ten AE vowels in /bVd/ context produced by ten talkers under three SNRs: −8, −5, and −3 dB. The words were presented for identification in a 10‐alternative forced choice task. Results showed that when AE and Korean listeners’ were tested under the same SNR, the across‐talker intelligibility scores were highly correlated for the two li...

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