The Relationship Between Tinnitus Pitch, Audiogram Edge Frequency, and Auditory Stream Segregation Abilities in Individuals With Tinnitus

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Saransh Jain ◽  
Riya Cherian ◽  
Nuggehalli P. Nataraja ◽  
Vijay Kumar Narne

Purpose Around 80%–93% of the individuals with tinnitus have hearing loss. Researchers have found that tinnitus pitch was related to the frequencies of hearing loss, but unclear about the relationship between tinnitus pitch and audiometry edge frequency. The comorbidity of tinnitus and speech perception in noise problems had also been reported, but the relationship between tinnitus pitch and speech perception in noise had seldom been investigated. This study was designed to estimate the relationship between tinnitus pitch, audiogram edge frequency, and speech perception in noise. The speech perception in noise was measured using auditory stream segregation paradigm. Method Thirteen individuals with bilateral mild-to-severe tonal tinnitus and minimal-to-mild cochlear hearing loss were selected. Thirteen individuals with hearing loss without tinnitus were also selected. The audiogram of each participant with tinnitus was matched with that of the participant without tinnitus. Tinnitus pitch of the participants with tinnitus was measured and compared with audiogram edge frequency. The stream segregation thresholds were calculated at the participants' admitted tinnitus pitch and one octave below the tinnitus pitch. The stream segregation thresholds were estimated at fission and fusion boundary using pure-tone stimuli in ABA paradigm. Results High correlation between tinnitus pitch and audiogram edge frequency was noted. Overall stream segregation thresholds were higher for individuals with tinnitus. Higher thresholds indicated poorer stream segregation abilities. Within tinnitus participants, the thresholds were significantly lesser at frequency corresponding to admitted tinnitus pitch than at one octave below the tinnitus pitch. Conclusions The information from this study may be helpful in educating the patients about the relationship between hearing loss and tinnitus. The findings may also account for speech-perception-in-noise difficulties often reported by the individuals with tinnitus.

2018 ◽  
Vol 364 ◽  
pp. 118-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marion David ◽  
Alexis N. Tausend ◽  
Olaf Strelcyk ◽  
Andrew J. Oxenham

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrich Hoppe ◽  
Thomas Hocke ◽  
Heinrich Iro

Abstract Hearing loss is one of the most common diseases worldwide. It affects communicative abilities in all age groups. However, it is well known that elderly people suffer more frequently from hearing loss. The aim of this study was to describe the relationship between hearing loss, age, and speech perception. The model that we employed used Random Forest Regression. It was applied to a large clinical data set of 19,801 ears, covering all degrees of hearing loss. It allows the estimation of age-related decline in speech perception in quiet, with the effect of pure-tone hearing loss completely separated. Our results show that speech scores depend on the specific type of hearing loss and age. We found age effects for all degrees of hearing loss. A deterioration in speech perception of up to 25 percentage points across the whole life span was observed. The largest decrease was 10 percentage points per life decade. The decline can be attributed to a distortion component of presbyacusis, which is not measured by pure-tone audiometry.


1976 ◽  
Vol 42 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 1071-1074 ◽  
Author(s):  
Betty Tuller ◽  
James R. Lackner

Primary auditory stream segregation, the perceptual segregation of acoustically related elements within a continuous auditory sequence into distinct spatial streams, prevents subjects from resolving the relative constituent order of repeated sequences of tones (Bregman & Campbell, 1971) or repeated sequences of consonant and vowel sounds (Lackner & Goldstein, 1974). To determine why primary auditory stream segregation does not interfere with the resolution of natural speech, 8 subjects were required to indicate the degree of stream segregation undergone by 24 repeated sequences of English monosyllables which varied in terms of the degrees of syntactic and intonational structure present. All sequences underwent primary auditory stream segregation to some extent but the amount of apparent spatial separation was less when syntactic and intonational structure was present.


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