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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.36 832-841 August 1993.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Effects of Word Predictability, Child Development, and Aging on Time-Gated Speech Recognition Performance

Chie H. Craig 1
Byoung W. Kim 1
Paula M. Pecyna Rhyner 1

Tricia K. Bowen Chirillo 1

1 University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

This study examined the interaction of acoustic-phonetic information with higher-level linguistic contextual information during the real-time speech perception process in child, young adult, and older adult listeners. Five age groups were studied: (a) young children ranging in age from 5 to 7 years, (b) older children aged 8 to 10 years, (c) young adults aged 18 to 23 years, (d) older adults aged 60 to 69 years, and (e) older adults aged 70 to 83 years. All subjects were presented with time-gated monosyllabic target words presented in sentence contexts containing contrasting levels of word predictability. Findings indicated that target word predictability influenced the timing and nature of the real-time recognition process including the listeners' use of initial word sounds. Predictability-high (PH) words were recognized earlier and with greater confidence than predictability-low (PL) words. PH recognition performance was more influenced by child development and aging than PL recognition performance. Older adult listeners required more PH-gated word stimuli to produce accurate responses than younger adults. Older children showed more effective use of PH contexts than younger children.

KEY WORDS: time-gated speech, real-time speech, speech recognition, aging, child development

Submitted on July 10, 1992
Accepted on March 9, 1993


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