Purpose: This study aimed to determine whether listening effort, as measured by pupil dilation and perceived listening effort (PLE) ratings, varies depending on whether the speech is produced by a speaker with mixed spastic-flaccid dysarthria secondary to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) versus a neurotypical speaker, and whether the listener accurately perceives the spoken phrase.Method: Thirty-four listeners completed a speech perception task while an eye-tracking camera tracked their pupil dilation. Phrases in the task were produced by a speaker with dysarthria secondary to ALS and a neurotypical speaker. After hearing each phrase, listeners repeated what they heard and rated PLE on a 7-point Likert scale. Phrase repetition accuracy (accurate vs. inaccurate) was determined from their verbal response. Generalized additive mixed-models (GAMMs) were used to evaluate the relationship of the speaker type (ALS vs. neurotypical), phrase repetition accuracy and their interaction with pupil dilation. PLE ratings were similarly evaluated using linear mixed-effects (LME) models.Results: Both pupil dilation and PLE ratings were greater when presented with the phrases produced by speaker with dysarthria relative to the neurotypical speaker, even when the phrase was accurately perceived by the listener. Inaccurately perceived phrases were associated with greater pupil dilation and PLE ratings than accurately perceived phrases. Interaction effects were revealed between speaker type and phrase repetition accuracy for pupil dilation but not for PLE ratings. Additionally, pupil dilation results indicated that the allocation of effort over time differed between the trials produced by both speakers.Conclusions: The results suggest listening effort is increased overall when listening to speaker with dysarthria compared to neurotypical speech, even when intelligibility is preserved. Although there was some overlap in the results for the pupil dilation and PLE ratings, notable differences suggest these measures are likely sensitive to distinct factors influencing listening effort.
Hirsch et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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