| Literature DB >> 26428832 |
Rochelle S Newman1, Monita Chatterjee2, Giovanna Morini3, Robert E Remez4.
Abstract
Recent findings suggest that development changes the ability to comprehend degraded speech. Preschool children showed greater difficulties perceiving noise-vocoded speech (a signal that integrates amplitude over broad frequency bands) than sine-wave speech (which maintains the spectral peaks without the spectrum envelope). In contrast, 27-month-old children in the present study could recognize speech with either type of degradation and performed slightly better with eight-channel vocoded speech than with sine-wave speech. This suggests that children's identification performance depends critically on the degree of degradation and that their success in recognizing unfamiliar speech encodings is encouraging overall.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26428832 PMCID: PMC4575314 DOI: 10.1121/1.4929731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acoust Soc Am ISSN: 0001-4966 Impact factor: 1.840