Development of a Thai Phonetically Balanced Monosyllabic Word Recognition Test: Derivation of Phoneme Distribution, Word List Construction, and Response Evaluations

Publication date: Available online 11 August 2018Source: Speech CommunicationAuthor(s): Charturong Tantibundhit, Chutamanee Onsuwan, Adirek Munthuli, Ploypailin Sirimujalin, Thanaporn Anansiripinyo, Sutanya Phuechpanpaisal, Nida Wright, Krit KosawatAbstractThis paper proposes a test tool for Thai word recognition, the Thammasat University Phonetically Balanced Word List 2014 (TU PB’14), standardized on several major criteria: phonemic balance, familiarity, reliability, list equivalency, and homogeneity. Phoneme distributions from the largest written Thai corpus (InterBEST) were obtained and used to construct five phonetically balanced word lists, each containing 25 frequently occurring monosyllabic words. Listeners’ percent correct discrimination scores from test and re-test sessions were not significantly different, confirming test reliability. Detailed analysis of listeners’ errors revealed that perceptual errors occurred predominantly for initial sound only, final only, and initial together with final. In terms of list equivalency and homogeneity, derived psychometric function slopes of TU PB’14 ranged from 0.0941 to 0.1155, while intensities required for 50% intelligibility ranged from 41.0279 to 41.3697. Two-way Chi-Square analysis performed on both parameters indicated that there was no significant difference among the word lists.
Source: Speech Communication - Category: Speech-Language Pathology Source Type: research