Classic demonstrations of the phonemic restoration effect show increased intelligibility of interrupted speech when the interruptions are caused by a plausible masking sound rather than by silent periods. Previous studies of this effect have been conducted exclusively under anechoic or nearly anechoic listening conditions. This study demonstrates that the effect is reversed when sounds are presented in a realistically simulated reverberant room (broadband T 60 ¼ 1.1 s): intelligibility is greater for silent interruptions than for interruptions by unmodulated noise. Additional results suggest that the reversal is primarily due to filling silent intervals with reverberant energy from the speech signal.
IntroductionThe phonemic restoration effect (Warren, 1970) is a remarkable phenomenon in which portions of a speech signal that have been interrupted by another sound are perceptually synthesized. The strength of the effect has been shown to depend on the plausibility of the interruption. For example, when the speech is interrupted by removing portions of the speech signal and replacing those portions with silence-a type of interruption that would be highly implausible in natural listening situations, the restoration effect does not occur. Conversely, when the speech is interrupted by other sounds that could plausibly mask the speech signal, the restoration effect is observed. The effect has been shown to produce objectively higher intelligibility (Bashford et al., 1992;Shinn-Cunningham and Wang, 2007) and can be enhanced when multimodal input is made available to the listener (Shahin and Miller, 2009). Overall, the phonemic restoration effect may be considered as a special case of interrupted speech perception (Miller and Licklider, 1950) in which top-down compensation factors such as context, expectation, and linguistic rules are thought to account for relatively intact word recognition even when significant portions of the speech are missing (Bashford et al., 1992). One aspect of the phonemic restoration effect that has not been previously considered is the role of the listening environment, which can under certain situations cause significant changes to the speech and interruption signals reaching the ears. For example, strong early reflections (occurring <50 ms following the direct-path) are known to improve speech intelligibility (Lochner and Burger, 1964; Nebalek and Robinette, 1978) by increasing the signal level reaching the ear. Later occurring reverberation, however, is known to cause degraded intelligibility due to the temporal distortions it imposes on the speech stimuli (Plomp, 1976). For interrupted speech signals, room reverberation will change the temporal characteristic of the interruption. When the interruptions are caused by silence, reverberation will fill the interval with decaying sound energy from the preceding speech. When interruptions are caused by a separate sound signal, the reverberation will result in the decay of interruption signal interfering with the portions of the spe...