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Modified spectral tilt affects infants' native-language discrimination of approximants and vowels
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Modified spectral tilt affects infants' native-language discrimination of approximants and vowels
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Bilateral cochlear implants in long-term and short-term deafness
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Signs of binaural processing with bilateral cochlear implants in the case of someone with more than 50 years of unilateral deafness
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Bilateral and Unilateral Cochlear Implant Users Compared on Speech Perception in Noise
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Who uses television captions, when, and why? Analyses based on the Australian Television Caption Users Survey
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Benefits of Sign Language Interpreting and Text Alternatives for Deaf Students’ Classroom Learning
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Parameters in television captioning for deaf and hard-of-hearing adults: effects of caption rate versus text reduction on comprehension
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In: Faculty of Education - Papers (Archive) (2008)
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Abstract:
Caption rate and text reduction are factors that appear to affect the comprehension of captions by people who are deaf or hard of hearing. These 2 factors are confounded in everyday captioning; rate (in words per minute) is slowed by text reduction. In this study, caption rate and text reduction were manipulated independently in 2 experiments to assess any differential effects and possible benefits for comprehension by deaf and hard-of-hearing adults. Volunteers for the study included adults with a range of reading levels, self-reported hearing status, and different communication and language preferences. Results indicate that caption rate (at 130, 180, 230 words per minute) and text reduction (at 84%, 92%, and 100% original text) have different effects for different adult users, depending on hearing status, age, and reading level. In particular, reading level emerges as a dominant factor: more proficient readers show better comprehension than poor readers and are better able to benefit from caption rate and, to some extent, text reduction modifications.
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Keyword:
adults; caption; captioning; comprehension; deaf; Education; Effects; for; hard; hearing; Parameters; rate; reduction; television; text
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URL: https://ro.uow.edu.au/edupapers/645
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Parameters in television captioning for deaf and hard-of-hearing adults : effects of caption rate versus text reduction on comprehension
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Parameters in television captioning for deaf and hard-of-hearing adults: effects of caption rate versus text reduction on comprehension
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Benefits of Sign Language Interpreting and Text Alternatives for Deaf Students' Classroom Learning
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Benefits of Sign Language Interpreting and Text Alternatives for Deaf Students' Classroom Learning
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Benefits of Sign Language Interpreting and Text Alternatives for Deaf Students' Classroom Learning
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Benefits of sign language interpreting and text alternatives for deaf students' classroom learning
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Benefits of sign language interpreting and text alternatives for deaf students' classroom learning
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