Effects of training length on adaptation to noise-vocoded speech

Author:

Drouin Julia R.1,Flores Stephany2

Affiliation:

1. Division of Speech and Hearing Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 1 , Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA

2. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, California State University Fullerton 2 , Fullerton, California 92831, USA

Abstract

Listeners show rapid perceptual learning of acoustically degraded speech, though the amount of exposure required to maximize speech adaptation is unspecified. The current work used a single-session design to examine the length of auditory training on perceptual learning for normal hearing listeners exposed to eight-channel noise-vocoded speech. Participants completed short, medium, or long training using a two-alternative forced choice sentence identification task with feedback. To assess learning and generalization, a 40-trial pre-test and post-test transcription task was administered using trained and novel sentences. Training results showed all groups performed near ceiling with no reliable differences. For test data, we evaluated changes in transcription accuracy using separate linear mixed models for trained or novel sentences. In both models, we observed a significant improvement in transcription at post-test relative to pre-test. Critically, the three training groups did not differ in the magnitude of improvement following training. Subsequent Bayes factors analysis evaluating the test by group interaction provided strong evidence in support of the null hypothesis. For these stimuli and procedure, results suggest increased training does not necessarily maximize learning outcomes; both passive and trained experience likely supported adaptation. Findings may contribute to rehabilitation recommendations for listeners adapting to degraded speech signals.

Funder

Research Start Up Funds

Publisher

Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

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