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Development of the Everyday Conversational Sentences in Noise test
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In: J Acoust Soc Am (2020)
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Measuring communication difficulty through effortful speech production during conversation
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The Effect of nearby maskers on speech intelligibility in reverberant, multi-talker environments
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Better-ear glimpsing at low frequencies in normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners
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A Method for assessing auditory spatial analysis in reverberant multitalker environments
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Cochlear implant speech intelligibility outcomes with structured and unstructured binary mask errors
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Evaluation of loudspeaker-based virtual sound environments for testing directional hearing aids
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Auditory masking of speech in reverberant multi-talker environments
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An Examination of speech reception thresholds measured in a simulated reverberant cafeteria environment
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Effect of audibility on spatial release from speech-on-speech masking
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The Influence of informational masking in reverberant, multi-talker environments
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Abstract:
The relevance of informational masking (IM) in real-world listening is not well understood. In literature, IM effects of up to 10 dB in measured speech reception thresholds (SRTs) are reported. However, these experiments typically employed simplified spatial configurations and speech corpora that magnified confusions. In this study, SRTs were measured with normal hearing subjects in a simulated cafeteria environment. The environment was reproduced by a 41-channel 3D-loudspeaker array. The target talker was 2 m in front of the listener and masking talkers were either spread throughout the room or colocated with the target. Three types of maskers were realized: one with the same talker as the target (maximum IM), one with talkers different from the target, and one with unintelligible, noise-vocoded talkers (minimal IM). Overall, SRTs improved for the spatially distributed conditions compared to the colocated conditions. Within the spatially distributed conditions, there was no significant difference between thresholds with the different- and vocoded-talker maskers. Conditions with the same-talker masker were the only conditions with substantially higher thresholds, especially in the colocated conditions. These results suggest that IM related to target-masker confusions, at least for normal-hearing listeners, is of low relevance in real-life listening. ; 10 page(s)
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1054191
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Investigating the acoustics of a sample of open plan and enclosed Kindergarten classrooms in Australia
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Objective analysis of ambisonics for hearing aid applications : effect of listener's head, room reverberation, and directional microphones
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The Effect of spatial separation in distance on the intelligibility of speech in rooms
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Modelling binaural detection of speech stimuli in complex reverberant environments
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Frequency dependent regularization of a mixed-order Ambisonics encoding system using psychoacoustically motivated metrics
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A Real-time hearing-aid research platform (HARP) : realization, calibration, and evaluation
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Modeling horizontal localization of complex sounds in the impaired and aided impaired auditory system
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Towards a listening in spatialized noise test using complex tones
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Spectral integration of interaural time differences in auditory localization
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