scholarly journals Age-Related Changes in Listening Effort for Children and Teenagers With Normal Hearing and Cochlear Implants

2020 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Benson Cheng-Lin Hsu ◽  
Filiep Vanpoucke ◽  
Margreet Langereis ◽  
Ann Dierckx ◽  
Astrid van Wieringen
2017 ◽  
Vol 28 (08) ◽  
pp. 685-697 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann E. Perreau ◽  
Yu-Hsiang Wu ◽  
Bailey Tatge ◽  
Diana Irwin ◽  
Daniel Corts

AbstractStudies have examined listening effort in individuals with hearing loss to determine the extent of the impairment. Regarding cochlear implants (CIs), results suggest that listening effort is improved using bilateral CIs compared to unilateral CIs. Few studies have investigated listening effort and outcomes related to the hybrid CI.Here, we compared listening effort across three CI groups, and to a normal-hearing control group. The impact of listener traits, that is, age, age at onset of hearing loss, duration of CI use, and working memory capacity, were examined relative to listening effort.The participants completed a dual-task paradigm with a primary task identifying sentences in noise and a secondary task measuring reaction time on a Stroop test. Performance was assessed for all participant groups at different signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), ranging in 2-dB steps from 0 to +10 dB relative to an individual’s SNR-50, at which the speech recognition performance is 50% correct. Participants completed three questions on listening effort, the Spatial Hearing Questionnaire, and a reading span test.All 46 participants were adults. The four participant groups included (1) 12 individuals with normal hearing, (2) 10 with unilateral CIs, (3) 12 with bilateral CIs, and (4) 12 with a hybrid short-electrode CI and bilateral residual hearing.Results from the dual-task experiment were compared using a mixed 4 (hearing group) by 6 (SNR condition) analysis of variance (ANOVA). Questionnaire results were compared using one-way ANOVAs, and correlations between listener traits and the objective and subjective measures were compared using Pearson correlation coefficients.Significant differences were found in speech perception among the normal-hearing and the unilateral and the bilateral CI groups. There was no difference in primary task performance among the hybrid CI and the normal-hearing groups. Across the six SNR conditions, listening effort improved to a greater degree for the normal-hearing group compared to the CI groups. However, there was no significant difference in listening effort between the CI groups. The subjective measures revealed significant differences between the normal-hearing and CI groups, but no difference among the three CI groups. Across all groups, age was significantly correlated with listening effort. We found no relationship between listening effort and the age at the onset of hearing loss, age at implantation, the duration of CI use, and working memory capacity for these participants.Listening effort was reduced to a greater degree for the normal-hearing group compared to the CI users. There was no significant difference in listening effort among the CI groups. For the CI users in this study, age was a significant factor with regard to listening effort, whereas other variables such as the duration of CI use and the age at the onset of hearing loss were not significantly related to listening effort.


2013 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 261-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamie L. Desjardins ◽  
Karen A. Doherty

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Winn ◽  
Katherine H. Teece

Speech perception and listening effort are complicated and interrelated concepts. One might assume that intelligibility performance (percent correct) is a proxy for listening effort, but there are some reasons to challenge whether that is actually true. Correct responses in speech perception tests could reflect effortful mental processing, and a completely wrong answer could evoke very little effort, especially if the misperception itself is linguistically well-formed and sensible. This paper presents evidence that listening effort is not a function of the proportion of words correct, but is rather driven by the types of errors, position of errors within a sentence, and the need to resolve ambiguity, reflecting how easily the listener can make sense of a perception. We offer a taxonomy of error types that is both intuitive and also consistent with data from two experiments measuring listening effort with careful controls to either elicit specific kinds of mistakes or to track specific mistakes retrospectively. Participants included individuals with normal hearing or with cochlear implants. In two experiments of sentence repetition, listening effort – indexed by changes in pupil size – was found to scale with the amount of perceptual restoration needed (phoneme versus whole word), and also scale with the sensibility of responses, but not with the number of intelligibility errors. Although mental corrective action and number of mistakes can scale together in many experiments, it is possible to dissociate them in order to advance toward a more explanatory (rather than correlational) account of listening effort.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie Rosemann ◽  
Christiane Thiel

Aging affects the brain’s underlying biophysical structure as well as its’ cellular and molecular functioning. Brain aging varies largely across individuals and is accelerated in a variety of disease states. Age-related hearing loss affects a large part of the older population and has been shown to impact cognition, brain structure and function. The main aim of this study was to investigate whether age-related hearing loss accelerates brain aging and is related to a decrease in cognitive function and increase in daily listening effort. We used structural neuroimaging data from a large sample of elderly subjects (n=163) with mild to moderate uncompensated age-related hearing loss or normal hearing. An established machine learning approach was applied to predict brain age from grey and white matter maps. Predicted brain age and chronological age significantly correlated across all participants. However, the difference between the predicted brain age and chronological age was neither significantly different between hard of hearing and normal-hearing participants, nor was this age difference significantly associated with general cognitive status or daily life listening effort. We conclude that uncompensated mild to moderate age-related hearing loss has negligible effects on brain age derived from structural neuroimaging data.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document