Subject: Re: Speech recognition in noise From: John Culling <cullingj@xxxxxxxx> Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2007 21:29:10 +0000 List-Archive:<http://lists.mcgill.ca/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=AUDITORY>That relationship will depend greatly on the sentence material used. A neat demonstration of this was presented by Arthur Boothroyd and Susan Nittrouer "Mathematical treatment of context effects in phoneme and word recognition" J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 84, 101-114 (1988). They don't go as low as feature recognition, but they cover the the roles of phonological, lexical, gramatical and semantic contraints in sentence recognition. John. Dr. John F. Culling (Reader) School of Psychology, Cardiff University. Tower Building, Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3AT Tel. +44 29 208 74523 FAX +44 29 208 74858 www.cf.ac.uk/psych/home/cullingj1/ >>> Mahan Azadpour <azadpour@xxxxxxxx> 19/11/07 6:06 PM >>> Dear List, Can any one direct me to any studies that have measured the correlation between speech recognition and phonological perception in noise ? I am interested to know how much perception of different phonological features predicts sentence recognition performance under any kind of noisy situations. Thanks in advance. Bests, Mahan