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.
CITATION STYLE
Newman, R. S., Chatterjee, M., Morini, G., & Remez, R. E. (2015). Toddlers’ comprehension of degraded signals: Noise-vocoded versus sine-wave analogs. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 138(3), EL311–EL317. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4929731
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