Publication | Closed Access
Is level irrelevant in "irrelevant speech"? Effects of loudness, signal-to-noise ratio, and binaural unmasking.
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Citations
18
References
1998
Year
MusicIrrelevant SpeechPsychoacousticsEngineeringSpeech EnhancementCommunicationBinaural UnmaskingLevel IrrelevantSpeech RecognitionNoiseHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceAuditory ModelingMasking-level DifferenceIrrelevant SoundIrrelevant Speech EffectSpeech CommunicationSpeech ProcessingSpeech Perception
A series of experiments explored the role of level, signal-to-noise ratio, and the masking-level difference in the irrelevant speech effect (ISE). In Experiment 1 the detrimental effects of irrelevant sound on serial recall were found to be the same whether the material (speech or music) was presented at a high (75 dB[A]) or low (60 dB[A]) overall level. In Experiment 2, adding pink noise to the speech signal produced a linear improvement in performance with decreasing speech-to-noise ratios. In Experiment 3 the contribution of binaural unmasking to the ISE was found to be negligible. The results (a) confirm that the segmented, changing nature of the irrelevant sound is crucial in producing the ISE and (b) suggest that the adverse effects of disruptive auditory input may be alleviated by introducing additional uniform masking noise.
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