Back to Search Start Over

Effect of wearing personal protective equipment on acoustic characteristics and speech perception during COVID-19

Authors :
Peng Zhou
Shimin Zong
Xin Xi
Hongjun Xiao
Source :
Applied acoustics. Acoustique applique. Angewandte Akustik. 197
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

With the COVID-19 pandemic, the usage of personal protective equipment (PPE) has become 'the new normal'. Both surgical masks and N95 masks with a face shield are widely used in healthcare settings to reduce virus transmission, but the use of these masks has a negative impact on speech perception. Therefore, transparent masks are recommended to solve this dilemma. However, there is a lack of quantitative studies regarding the effect of PPE on speech perception. This study aims to compare the effect on speech perception of different types of PPE (surgical masks, N95 masks with face shield and transparent masks) in healthcare settings, for listeners with normal hearing in the audiovisual or auditory-only modality. The Bamford-Kowal-Bench (BKB)-like Mandarin speech stimuli were digitally recorded by a G.R.A.S KEMAR manikin without and with masks (surgical masks, N95 masks with face shield and transparent masks). Two variants of video display were created (with or without visual cues) and tagged to the corresponding audio recordings. The speech recording and video were presented to listeners simultaneously in each of four conditions: unattenuated speech with visual cues (no mask); surgical mask attenuated speech without visual cues; N95 mask with face shield attenuated speech without visual cues; and transparent mask attenuated speech with visual cues. The signal-to-noise ratio for 50 % correct scores (SNR

Subjects

Subjects :
Acoustics and Ultrasonics

Details

ISSN :
0003682X
Volume :
197
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied acoustics. Acoustique applique. Angewandte Akustik
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....758f32a63205e44a6be83f459e182a4f