Published October 24, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Listening effort in children and adults in classroom noise

  • 1. ROR icon RWTH Aachen University

Description

It is well known that hearing in noisy situations is more challenging than in quiet environments. This holds true for adults and especially for children. This study employed a child-appropriate dualtask paradigm to investigate listening effort in children aged six to ten years and young adults. The primary task involved word recognition, while the secondary task evaluated digit recall. Additionally, subjective perception of listening effort was assessed using a child-appropriate questionnaire. This study incorporated plausible sound reproduction and examined classroom scenarios including multitalker babble noise with two signal-to-noise ratios (0 dB and −3 dB) in an anechoic and an acoustically simulated classroom environment. Forty-four primary school children aged six to ten (17 first- to second-graders and 18 third- to fourth-graders) and 25 young adults participated in this study. The results revealed differences in listening effort between the noise conditions in third- to fourth-graders and supported using the dual task paradigm for that age group. For all three age groups, a greater subjective perception of listening effort in noise was found. Furthermore, a correlation between the subjective perception of listening effort and behavioural listening effort based on the experimental results was found for third- to fourth-graders and adults.

Files

41598_2024_Article_76932.pdf

Files (3.3 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:ab8590365b1178e5912f6ac87f4f8214
3.3 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Funding

European Commission
Equal-Life - Early Environmental quality and life-course mental health effects 874724

Dates

Available
2024-10-24