A large number of non-native English speakers may be found in American classrooms, both as listeners and talkers. Little is known about how this population comprehends speech in realistic adverse acoustical conditions. A study was conducted to investigate the effects of background noise level (BNL), reverberation time (RT), and talker foreign accent on native and non-native listeners' speech comprehension, while controlling for English language abilities. A total of 115 adult listeners completed comprehension tasks under 15 acoustic conditions: three BNLs (RC-30, RC-40, and RC-50) and five RTs (from 0.4 to 1.2 s). Fifty-six listeners were tested with speech from native English-speaking talkers and 59 with native Mandarin-Chinese-speaking talkers. Results show that, while higher BNLs were generally more detrimental to listeners with lower English proficiency, all listeners experienced significant comprehension deficits above RC-40 with native English talkers. This limit was lower (i.e., above RC-30), however, with Chinese talkers. For reverberation, non-native listeners as a group performed best with RT up to 0.6 s, while native listeners performed equally well up to 1.2 s. A matched foreign accent benefit has also been identified, where the negative impact of higher reverberation does not exist for non-native listeners who share the talker's native language.
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May 16 2016
Effects of noise, reverberation and foreign accent on native and non-native listeners' performance of English speech comprehension
Z. Ellen Peng;
Z. Ellen Peng
a)
Durham School of Architectural Engineering and Construction,
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
, 1110 South 67th Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68182-0681, USA
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Lily M. Wang
Lily M. Wang
Durham School of Architectural Engineering and Construction,
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
, 1110 South 67th Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68182-0681, USA
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a)
Current address: Institute of Technical Acoustics, RWTH Aachen University, Kopernikusstrasse 5, 52074 Aachen. Electronic mail: zellenpeng@gmail.com
J Acoust Soc Am 139, 2772–2783 (2016)
Article history
Received:
July 03 2015
Accepted:
April 12 2016
Citation
Z. Ellen Peng, Lily M. Wang; Effects of noise, reverberation and foreign accent on native and non-native listeners' performance of English speech comprehension. J Acoust Soc Am 1 May 2016; 139 (5): 2772–2783. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4948564
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