Abstract
Older adults' normally adaptive use of semantic context to aid in word recognition can have a negative consequence of causing misrecognitions, especially when the word actually spoken sounds similar to a word that more closely fits the context. Word-pairs were presented to young and older adults, with the second word of the pair masked by multi-talker babble varying in signal-to-noise ratio. Results confirmed older adults' greater tendency to misidentify words based on their semantic context compared to the young adults, and to do so with a higher level of confidence. This age difference was unaffected by differences in the relative level of acoustic masking.
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CITATION STYLE
Rogers, C. S., & Wingfield, A. (2015). Stimulus-independent semantic bias misdirects word recognition in older adults. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 138(1), EL26–EL30. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4922363
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