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Is Recognition of Speech in Noise Related to Memory Disruption Caused by Irrelevant Sound?

Oberfeld, Daniel ; Staab, Katharina ; Kattner, Florian ; Ellermeier, Wolfgang (2024)
Is Recognition of Speech in Noise Related to Memory Disruption Caused by Irrelevant Sound?
In: Trends in Hearing, 2024, 28
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00027839
Article, Secondary publication, Publisher's Version

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Item Type: Article
Type of entry: Secondary publication
Title: Is Recognition of Speech in Noise Related to Memory Disruption Caused by Irrelevant Sound?
Language: English
Date: 30 September 2024
Place of Publication: Darmstadt
Year of primary publication: 25 July 2024
Place of primary publication: Thousand Oaks, California, USA
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Journal or Publication Title: Trends in Hearing
Volume of the journal: 28
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00027839
Corresponding Links:
Origin: Secondary publication DeepGreen
Abstract:

Listeners with normal audiometric thresholds show substantial variability in their ability to understand speech in noise (SiN). These individual differences have been reported to be associated with a range of auditory and cognitive abilities. The present study addresses the association between SiN processing and the individual susceptibility of short-term memory to auditory distraction (i.e., the irrelevant sound effect [ISE]). In a sample of 67 young adult participants with normal audiometric thresholds, we measured speech recognition performance in a spatial listening task with two interfering talkers (speech-in-speech identification), audiometric thresholds, binaural sensitivity to the temporal fine structure (interaural phase differences [IPD]), serial memory with and without interfering talkers, and self-reported noise sensitivity. Speech-in-speech processing was not significantly associated with the ISE. The most important predictors of high speech-in-speech recognition performance were a large short-term memory span, low IPD thresholds, bilaterally symmetrical audiometric thresholds, and low individual noise sensitivity. Surprisingly, the susceptibility of short-term memory to irrelevant sound accounted for a substantially smaller amount of variance in speech-in-speech processing than the nondisrupted short-term memory capacity. The data confirm the role of binaural sensitivity to the temporal fine structure, although its association to SiN recognition was weaker than in some previous studies. The inverse association between self-reported noise sensitivity and SiN processing deserves further investigation.

Uncontrolled Keywords: speech perception in noise, irrelevant sound effect, binaural temporal fine structure sensitivity, working memory, noise sensitivity, variable importance measures
Status: Publisher's Version
URN: urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-278397
Classification DDC: 100 Philosophy and psychology > 150 Psychology
Divisions: 03 Department of Human Sciences > Institute for Psychology
Date Deposited: 30 Sep 2024 12:23
Last Modified: 29 Oct 2024 07:53
SWORD Depositor: Deep Green
URI: https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/27839
PPN: 522448623
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