Listening effort in native and nonnative English-speaking children using low linguistic single-and dual-task paradigms
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Date
Authors
Oosthuizen, Ilze
Picou, Erin M.
Pottas, Lidia
Myburgh, Hermanus Carel
Swanepoel, De Wet
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association
Abstract
PURPOSE : It is not clear if behavioral indices of listening effort are sensitive to changes in signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for young children (7-12 years old) from multilingual backgrounds. The purpose of this study was to explore the effects of SNR on listening effort in multilingual school-aged children (native English, nonnative English) as measured with a single- and a dual-task paradigm with low-linguistic speech stimuli (digits). The study also aimed to explore age effects on digit triplet recognition and response times (RTs). METHOD : Sixty children with normal hearing participated, 30 per language group. Participants completed single and dual tasks in three SNRs (quiet, -10 dB, and -15 dB). Speech stimuli for both tasks were digit triplets. Verbal RTs were the listening effort measure during the single-task paradigm. A visual monitoring task was the secondary task during the dual-task paradigm. RESULTS : Significant effects of SNR on RTs were evident during both single- and dual-task paradigms. As expected, language background did not affect the pattern of RTs. The data also demonstrate a maturation effect for triplet recognition during both tasks and for RTs during the dual-task only. CONCLUSIONS : Both single- and dual-task paradigms were sensitive to changes in SNR for school-aged children between 7 and 12 years of age. Language background (English as native language vs. English as nonnative language) had no significant effect on triplet recognition or RTs, demonstrating practical utility of low-linguistic stimuli for testing children from multilingual backgrounds.
Description
Keywords
Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), Ease of language understanding (ELU), Listening, Multilingual school-aged children, Low-linguistic speech stimuli, Digit triplet recognition, Response time
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Citation
Oosthuizen, I., Picou, E.M., Pottas, L. et al. 2020, 'Listening effort in native and nonnative English-speaking children using low linguistic single-and dual-task paradigms', Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, vol. 63, no. 6, pp. 1979-1989.