This project investigated whether pediatric (5-14 years) and adult (30-60 years) cochlear implant (CI) users benefit from a target/masker sex-mismatch for speech-in-speech recognition. Speech recognition thresholds were estimated in a two-male-talker or a two-female-talker masker. Target and masker speech were either sex-matched or sex-mismatched. For both age groups, performance for sex-matched talkers was worse for male than female speech. Sex-mismatch benefit was observed for the two-male-talker masker, indicating CI users can benefit from a target/masker sex mismatch. No benefit was observed for the two-female-talker masker, suggesting this effect may depend on the relative contributions of energetic and informational masking.
CITATION STYLE
Richter, M. E., Dillon, M. T., Buss, E., & Leibold, L. J. (2021). Sex-mismatch benefit for speech-in-speech recognition by pediatric and adult cochlear implant users. JASA Express Letters, 1(8). https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0005806
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