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  4. Listening effort and speech intelligibility in listening situations affected by noise and reverberation
 
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2014
Journal Article
Title

Listening effort and speech intelligibility in listening situations affected by noise and reverberation

Abstract
This study compared the combined effect of noise and reverberation on listening effort and speech intelligibility to predictions of the speech transmission index (STI). Listening effort was measured in normal-hearing subjects using a scaling procedure. Speech intelligibility scores were measured in the same subjects and conditions: (a) Speech-shaped noise as the only interfering factor, (b) + (c) fixed signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) of 0 or 7 dB and reverberation as detrimental factors, and (d) reverberation as the only detrimental factor. In each condition, SNR and reverberation were combined to produce STI values of 0.17, 0.30, 0.43, 0.57, and 0.70, respectively. Listening effort always decreased with increasing STI, thus enabling a rough prediction, but a significant bias was observed indicating that listening effort was lower in reverberation only than in noise only at the same STI for one type of impulse responses. Accordingly, speech intelligibility increased with increasing STI and was significantly better in reverberation only than in noise only at the same STI. Further analyses showed that the broadband reverberation time is not always a good estimate of speech degradation in reverberation and that different speech materials may differ in their robustness toward detrimental effects of reverberation.
Author(s)
Rennies, Jan  
Schepker, H.
Holube, I.
Kollmeier, B.  
Journal
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America : JASA  
DOI
10.1121/1.4897398
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Digitale Medientechnologie IDMT  
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