The effect of nearby maskers on speech intelligibility in reverberant, multi-talker environments

被引:10
|
作者
Westermann, Adam [2 ]
Buchholz, Joerg M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Macquarie Univ, Natl Acoust Labs, 16 Univ Ave, N Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia
[2] Macquarie Univ, Dept Linguist, Bldg C5A,Balaclava Rd, N Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia
来源
关键词
COCKTAIL PARTY PHENOMENON; INFORMATIONAL MASKING; SPATIAL SEPARATION; HEARING; DISTANCE; CUES; NOISE;
D O I
10.1121/1.4979000
中图分类号
O42 [声学];
学科分类号
070206 ; 082403 ;
摘要
The extent to which informational masking (IM) is involved in real-world listening is not well understood. In the literature, IM effects of more than 8 dB are reported, but these experiments typically used simplified spatial configurations and speech materials with exaggerated confusions. Westermann and Buchholz [(2015b). J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 138, 584-593] considered a simulated cafeteria and found only substantial IM effects when the target and maskers were colocated and the same talker. The present study further investigates the relevance of IM in real-world environments, specifically distractions by nearby maskers and the effect of hearing impairment. Speech reception thresholds (SRTs) were measured with normal hearing (NH) and sensorineural hearing impaired (HI) listeners in a simulated cafeteria environment. Three different masker configurations were considered: (1) seven dialogues distributed in the cafeteria, (2) two monologues presented close to the listener with varying angular separation, and (3) a combination of (1) and (2). The contribution of IM was measured as the difference in SRTs between speech maskers and unintelligible vocoded maskers. No significant IM was found with the seven dialogues alone. Including nearby maskers resulted in substantial IM for both NH and HI listeners, suggesting that such maskers might result in IM in real-world environments. (C) 2017 Acoustical Society of America.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:2214 / 2223
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Testing the role of temporal coherence on speech intelligibility with noise and single-talker maskers
    Lee, Jaeeun
    Oxenham, Andrew J.
    Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2024, 156 (05): : 3285 - 3297
  • [22] Multi-Channel Speaker Verification for Single and Multi-talker Speech
    Kataria, Saurabh
    Zhang, Shi-Xiong
    Yu, Dong
    INTERSPEECH 2021, 2021, : 4608 - 4612
  • [23] Streaming Multi-talker Speech Recognition with Joint Speaker Identification
    Lu, Liang
    Kanda, Naoyuki
    Li, Jinyu
    Gong, Yifan
    INTERSPEECH 2021, 2021, : 1782 - 1786
  • [24] Adjustable Coherent-to-Diffuse Power Estimator for Binaural Speech Enhancement in Multi-Talker Environments
    Ghanavi, Reza
    Jin, Craig T.
    IEEE-ACM TRANSACTIONS ON AUDIO SPEECH AND LANGUAGE PROCESSING, 2024, 32 : 2312 - 2323
  • [25] Monaural multi-talker speech recognition using factorial speech processing models
    Khademian, Mahdi
    Homayounpour, Mohammad Mehdi
    SPEECH COMMUNICATION, 2018, 98 : 1 - 16
  • [26] Improved Decoding of Attentional Selection in Multi-Talker Environments with Self-Supervised Learned Speech Representation
    Han, Cong
    Choudhari, Vishal
    Li, Yinghao Aaron
    Mesgarani, Nima
    2023 45TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE & BIOLOGY SOCIETY, EMBC, 2023,
  • [27] Streaming End-to-End Multi-Talker Speech Recognition
    Lu, Liang
    Kanda, Naoyuki
    Li, Jinyu
    Gong, Yifan
    IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING LETTERS, 2021, 28 : 803 - 807
  • [28] END-TO-END MULTI-TALKER OVERLAPPING SPEECH RECOGNITION
    Tripathi, Anshuman
    Lu, Han
    Sak, Hasim
    2020 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ACOUSTICS, SPEECH, AND SIGNAL PROCESSING, 2020, : 6129 - 6133
  • [29] Multi-talker background and semantic priming effect
    Dekerle, Marie
    Boulenger, Veronique
    Hoen, Michel
    Meunier, Fanny
    FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2014, 8 : 1 - 13
  • [30] Variational Loopy Belief Propagation for Multi-talker Speech Recognition
    Rennie, Steven J.
    Hershey, John R.
    Olsen, Peder A.
    INTERSPEECH 2009: 10TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL SPEECH COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION 2009, VOLS 1-5, 2009, : 1367 - 1370