Comprehension of Speeded Discourse by Younger and Older Listeners

Researchers have argued that older adults are more adversely affected by speeding speech than are younger adults. However, the age effects usually occur when (1) the speech materials are artificially speeded to rates well above those that occur in natural speech; (2) the speeding method introduces distortions that tax the older adult's auditory processes; and (3) the speech materials are simple sentences or very short passages. This study evaluated whether older adults are disadvantaged when listening to extended discourse (10- to 15-min lectures) speeded to a rate near to the limit of normally encountered fast speech (240 words/min) with a minimum of acoustic distortion. Perceptual difficulty was further manipulated by presenting stimuli in either quiet or with a 12-talker background babble. Younger and older adults had more difficulty recalling the details of the discourse and integrating their contexts when stimuli were presented at faster rates and in higher levels of background noise. Although each of these manipulations were found to cause large differences in performance, the age groups were generally found to perform analogously in most conditions. Potentially the availability of semantically rich materials, and the extended durations of the passages, allowed the older adults an opportunity to adjust to the faster speech rates and maintain performance levels similar to younger adults.

[1]  Douglas S Brungart,et al.  The effects of spatial separation in distance on the informational and energetic masking of a nearby speech signal. , 2002, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[2]  J. F. Schmitt,et al.  Older listeners' ability to comprehend speaker-generated rate alteration of passages. , 1985, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[3]  G. Kidd,et al.  The effect of spatial separation on informational and energetic masking of speech. , 2002, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[4]  Arthur Wingfield,et al.  Hearing Loss and Perceptual Effort: Downstream Effects on Older Adults’ Memory for Speech , 2005, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[5]  William J. Hoyer,et al.  Adult development and aging , 1982 .

[6]  M. Daneman,et al.  How young and old adults listen to and remember speech in noise. , 1995, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[7]  R L Freyman,et al.  Spatial release from informational masking in speech recognition. , 2001, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[8]  Jacob Cohen Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences , 1969, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[9]  Bruce A Schneider,et al.  Why do older adults have difficulty following conversations? , 2006, Psychology and aging.

[10]  J. L. Miller,et al.  Articulation Rate and Its Variability in Spontaneous Speech: A Reanalysis and Some Implications , 1984, Phonetica.

[11]  A. Wingfield,et al.  Speed of processing in normal aging: effects of speech rate, linguistic structure, and processing time. , 1985, Journal of gerontology.

[12]  Rapid speech processing and divided attention: processing rate versus processing resources as an explanation of age effects. , 1992, Psychology and aging.

[13]  A. Duquesnoy Effect of a single interfering noise or speech source upon the binaural sentence intelligibility of aged persons. , 1983, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[14]  S. Gordon-Salant,et al.  Temporal factors and speech recognition performance in young and elderly listeners. , 1993, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[15]  D S Brungart,et al.  Informational and energetic masking effects in the perception of two simultaneous talkers. , 2001, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[16]  S. Gordon-Salant,et al.  Auditory temporal processing in elderly listeners. , 1996, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.

[17]  Bruce A. Schneider,et al.  Investigating the Influence of Continuous Babble on Auditory Short-Term Memory Performance , 2008, Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[18]  P. Carpenter,et al.  Individual differences in working memory and reading , 1980 .

[19]  S. Gordon-Salant,et al.  Profile of auditory temporal processing in older listeners. , 1999, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[20]  J. Dubno,et al.  Effects of age and mild hearing loss on speech recognition in noise. , 1984, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[21]  Liang Li,et al.  How competing speech interferes with speech comprehension in everyday listening situations. , 2007, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.

[22]  P. Tun Fast noisy speech: age differences in processing rapid speech with background noise. , 1998, Psychology and aging.

[23]  T. Salthouse A Theory of Cognitive Aging , 1985 .

[24]  Cynthia P. May,et al.  Inhibitory control, circadian arousal, and age. , 1999 .

[25]  Bruce A Schneider,et al.  Speech comprehension difficulties in older adults: cognitive slowing or age-related changes in hearing? , 2005, Psychology and aging.

[26]  P. Lachenbruch Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (2nd ed.) , 1989 .

[27]  Lynn Hasher,et al.  Working Memory, Comprehension, and Aging: A Review and a New View , 1988 .

[28]  A Wingfield,et al.  Cognitive factors in auditory performance: context, speed of processing, and constraints of memory. , 1996, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.

[29]  S. Gordon-Salant,et al.  Sources of age-related recognition difficulty for time-compressed speech. , 2001, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[30]  Bruce A Schneider,et al.  Comparing the effects of aging and background noise on short-term memory performance. , 2000, Psychology and aging.

[31]  J. F. Schmitt,et al.  The effects of time compression and time expansion on passage comprehension by elderly listeners. , 1983, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[32]  P. Rabbitt,et al.  Channel-Capacity, Intelligibility and Immediate Memory , 1968, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology.

[33]  P. Rabbitt Mild hearing loss can cause apparent memory failures which increase with age and reduce with IQ. , 1990, Acta oto-laryngologica. Supplementum.

[34]  J. Cerella Aging and Information-Processing Rate , 1990 .

[35]  T Letowski,et al.  Effects of age, speech rate, and type of test on temporal auditory processing. , 1997, Journal of speech, language, and hearing research : JSLHR.

[36]  A Wingfield,et al.  Age differences in processing information from television news: the effects of bisensory augmentation. , 1990, Journal of gerontology.

[37]  D. Gopher,et al.  Attention and performance XVII: Cognitive regulation of performance: Interaction of theory and application. , 1999 .

[38]  M. Daneman,et al.  Listening to discourse in distracting settings: the effects of aging. , 2000, Psychology and aging.

[39]  Fergus I. M. Craik,et al.  Aging and cognitive deficits : The role of attentional resources , 1982 .

[40]  Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow,et al.  Adult age differences in knowledge-driven reading , 2004 .

[41]  W. M. Rabinowitz,et al.  Standardization of a test of speech perception in noise. , 1979, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[42]  R L Freyman,et al.  The role of perceived spatial separation in the unmasking of speech. , 1999, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[43]  Liang Li,et al.  Does the information content of an irrelevant source differentially affect spoken word recognition in younger and older adults? , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[44]  B. Shinn-Cunningham,et al.  Informational masking: counteracting the effects of stimulus uncertainty by decreasing target-masker similarity. , 2003, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[45]  F. Hughes,et al.  Adult development and aging. , 1987, Annual review of psychology.

[46]  L. Humes Speech understanding in the elderly. , 1996, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.

[47]  M Kathleen Pichora-Fuller,et al.  Listening in aging adults: from discourse comprehension to psychoacoustics. , 2002, Canadian journal of experimental psychology = Revue canadienne de psychologie experimentale.

[48]  T. Salthouse The processing-speed theory of adult age differences in cognition. , 1996, Psychological review.