Some Japanese monosyllables contain consonants that are not easily discernible for individuals with sensorineural hearing loss. However, the acoustic features that make these monosyllables difficult to discern have not been clearly identified. Here, this study used the autocorrelation function (ACF), which can capture temporal features of signals, to clarify the factors influencing speech intelligibility. For each monosyllable, five factors extracted from the ACF [Φ(0): total energy; τ and ϕ: delay time and amplitude of the maximum peak; τ: effective duration; W: spectral centroid], voice onset time, speech intelligibility index, and loudness level were compared with the percentage of correctly perceived articulations (144 ears) obtained by 50 Japanese vowel and consonant-vowel monosyllables produced by one female speaker. Results showed that median effective duration [(τ)] was strongly correlated with the percentage of correctly perceived articulations of the consonants (r = 0.87, p < 0.01). (τ) values were computed by running ACFs with the time lag at which the magnitude of the logarithmic-ACF envelope had decayed to -10 dB. Effective duration is a measure of temporal pattern persistence, i.e., the duration over which the waveform maintains a stable pattern. The authors postulate that low recognition ability is related to degraded perception of temporal fluctuation patterns.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4976064 | DOI Listing |
Ear Hear
September 2024
Research Institute of Electrical Communication, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan.
Objectives: To examine the effects of distractor sounds presented to the contralateral ear on speech intelligibility in patients with listening difficulties without apparent peripheral pathology and in control participants.
Design: This study examined and analyzed 15 control participants (age range, 22 to 30 years) without any complaints of listening difficulties and 15 patients (age range, 15 to 33 years) diagnosed as having listening difficulties without apparent peripheral pathology in the outpatient clinic of the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Tohoku University Hospital. Speech intelligibility for 50 Japanese monosyllables presented to the right ear was examined under the following three different conditions: "without contralateral sound," "with continuous white noise in the contralateral ear," and "with music stimuli in the contralateral ear.
J Acoust Soc Am
April 2024
Research Department, National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Tachikawa, Tokyo 190-8561, Japan.
The notion of the "perceptual center" or the "P-center" has been put forward to account for the repeated finding that acoustic and perceived syllable onsets do not necessarily coincide, at least in the perception of simple monosyllables or disyllables. The magnitude of the discrepancy between acoustics and perception-the location of the P-center in the speech signal- has proven difficult to estimate, though acoustic models of the effect do exist. The present study asks if the P-center effect can be documented in natural connected speech of English and Japanese and examines if an acoustic model that defines the P-center as the moment of the fastest energy change in a syllabic amplitude envelope adequately reflects the P-center in the two languages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
July 2023
In conventional bone-conduction (BC) devices, a vibrator is typically attached to the mastoid process of the temporal bone or the condyle process of the mandible. However, BC-sound presentations to facial parts such as the nose and cheek have also been investigated recently. As the face is the among the most complex structures of the human body, transmission of sounds using BC on different facial parts are likely to show different perception and propagation characteristics than those presented to conventional parts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To assess the validity of self-reported articulatory oral motor skill against objectively measured repetitive articulatory rate (oral diadochokinesis [oral-DDK]) as a gold standard index for articulatory oral motor skill in community-dwelling older Japanese adults.
Methods: This cross-sectional study included 607 Japanese adults (mean age = 73.9 years).
J Laryngol Otol
March 2024
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Tokyo Medical University, Tokyo, Japan.
Objective: This study aimed to use short-form visual analogue scale cochlear implantation questionnaires to evaluate subjective aspects at each out-patient visit. The correlation between subjective hearing tests using the short-form visual analogue scale and objective hearing outcomes was evaluated.
Method: This study was conducted in a single centre.
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