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ERIC Number: EJ1303373
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2021-Apr
Pages: 14
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-1092-4388
EISSN: N/A
Aging Effects on Categorical Perception of Mandarin Lexical Tones in Noise
Wang, Yuxia; Yang, Xiaohu; Ding, Hongwei; Xu, Can; Liu, Chang
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, v64 n4 p1376-1389 Apr 2021
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine the aging effects on the categorical perception (CP) of Mandarin lexical Tones 1-4 and Tones 1-2 in noise. It also investigated whether listeners' categorical tone perception in noise correlated with their general tone identification of 20 natural vowel-plus-tone signals in noise. Method: Twelve younger and 12 older listeners with normal hearing were recruited in both tone identification and discrimination tasks in a CP paradigm where fundamental frequency contours of target stimuli varied systematically from the flat tone (Tone 1) to the rising/falling tones (Tones 2/4). Both tasks were conducted in quiet and noise with signal-to-noise ratios set at -5 and -10 dB, respectively, and general tone identification of natural speech signals was also tested in noise conditions. Results: Compared with younger listeners, older listeners had shallower identification slopes and smaller discrimination peakedness in Tones 1-2/4 perception in all listening conditions, except for Tones 1-4 perception in quiet where no group differences were found. Meanwhile, noise affected Tones 1-2/4 perception: The signal-to-noise ratio condition at -10 dB brought shallower slope in Tones 1-2/4 identification and less peakedness in Tones 1-4 discrimination for both listener groups. Older listeners' CP in noise, the identification slopes in particular, positively correlated with their general tone identification in noise, but such correlations were partially missing for younger listeners. Conclusions: Both aging and the presence of speech-shaped noise significantly reduced the CP of Mandarin Tones 1-2/4. Listeners' Mandarin tone recognition may be related to their CP of Mandarin tones.
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Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: N/A
Authoring Institution: N/A
Identifiers - Location: China
Grant or Contract Numbers: N/A