The better ear of a listener is the ear that benefits most from head shadow effects in a setting with spatially separated sources. Traditionally, the better ear is considered to be the ear that receives a signal at the best signal-to-noise ratio. For a speech target in interfering speech, the concept of rating the better ear based on glimpses was explored. The laterality of the expected better ear was shown to be well represented by metrics based on glimpsing. When employing better-ear glimpsing as a microscopic predictor for speech intelligibility, a strong relation was found between the amount of glimpsed target speech received by the better ear and the performance on a consonant recognition task. This relation was investigated for two spatial processing methods that included or excluded the possibility to use better-ear listening. It was shown that the amount of glimpses at the better ear plus an effect of angular separation of speech sources could account for a substantial part of the performance, but that a small, additional role of the contralateral ear may need to be considered.
In situations with competing talkers or in the presence of masking noise, speech intelligibility can be improved by spatially separating the target speaker from the interferers. This advantage is generally referred to as spatial release from masking, and different mechanisms have been suggested to explain it. One proposed mechanism to benefit from spatial cues is the binaural masking release, which is purely stimulus-driven. According to this mechanism, the spatial benefit results from differences in the binaural cues of target and masker, which need to appear simultaneously in time and frequency to improve the signal detection. In an alternative proposed mechanism, the differences in the interaural cues improve the segregation of auditory streams, a process, which involves top-down processing rather than being purely stimulus-driven. Other than the cues that produce binaural masking release, the interaural cue differences between target and interferer required to improve stream segregation do not have to appear simultaneously in time and frequency. This study is concerned with the contribution of binaural masking release to spatial release from masking for three masker types that differ with respect to the amount of energetic masking they exert. Speech intelligibility was measured, employing a stimulus manipulation that inhibits binaural masking release and analysed with a metric to account for the number of better-ear glimpses. Results indicate that the contribution of the stimulus-driven binaural masking release plays a minor role while binaural stream segregation and the availability of glimpses in the better ear had a stronger influence on improving the speech intelligibility.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.