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This paper describes two experiments on the effect of reduced spectral contrast on the speech-reception threshold (SRT) for sentences in a background of interfering sound. Signal processing is performed by smoothing the envelope of the squared short-time fast Fourier transform by a convolution with a Gaussian-shaped filter, and overlapping additions to reconstruct a continuous signal. In the first experiment the effect of reduced spectral contrast on the SRT for male speech is investigated and compared with previously obtained results for female speech ter Keurs et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 91, 2872-2880 (1992). Spectral energy is smeared over bandwidths of 1/8, 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 1, 2, and 4 oct. The results show that, despite the differences in spectral pattern between male and female voices, the SRT in noise increases similarly for both voices for smearing bandwidths over 1/3 oct. In terms of the ripple density of the spectral envelope the results indicate that the range of lower spectral modulations, up to a limit of about 1.5 periods/oct, is sufficient for the intelligibility of speech in interfering sounds. In the second experiment the extent of the threshold difference between a speech masker and a noise masker is investigated for spectral smearing bandwidths of 1/2, 1, and 2 oct. The release from masking found for the speech masker relative to the (steady-state) noise masker decreases with spectral envelope smearing.
Keurs et al. (Mon,) studied this question.