Work performance and mental workload in multiple talker environments
Résumé
The impairment of cognitive performance resulting from the presence of speech sounds is known to increase as the intelligibility of the speech signals is improved. For that reason, speech intelligibility measures are used to quantify the nuisance potential of an unattended voice. However, most of these indexes struggle with situations in which the level of the masking sound is fluctuating. This is the case in open-plan offices, where competing voices are involved. This paper relates a set of experiments in which subjects had to carry out a basic memory task in various office-like noise settings. In addition to a target speech, the masking sounds were made up of speech and differed in level or temporal variability. Disturbance was assessed both through objective measurements of performance and subjective reports of workload. The results highlight the importance of taking into account the temporal fluctuations of the overall ambient sound when trying to ascertain the influence of speech intelligibility on observed and perceived disturbance during the performing of a mental activity. Insights are provided which could lead to the use of a speech intelligibility measure better equipped to deal with multi-sources environments.
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