| Literature DB >> 11548044 |
N Grimault1, C Micheyl, R P Carlyon, P Arthaud, L Collet.
Abstract
The influence of hearing loss and aging on the perceptual organization of sound sequences was investigated by comparing the ability of young normal-hearing subjects and elderly subjects having either impaired or normal hearing for their age to form perceptual auditory streams from sequences of harmonic complex tones as a function of differences in fundamental frequency (F0). The sequences consisted of repeating triplets of harmonic complex tones separated by a silence (ABA-). In conditions in which the F0s of the A and B tone were so low that the harmonics could not be individually resolved by the peripheral auditory system even in the young normal-hearing subjects, those subjects showed similar stream segregation performance to the elderly hearing-impaired subjects. In contrast, when the F0s of the tones were high enough for the harmonics to be largely resolved at the auditory periphery in normal-hearing subjects, but presumably unresolved in the elderly subjects, the former showed significantly more stream segregation than the latter. These results, which cannot be consistently explained in terms of age differences, suggest that auditory stream segregation is adversely affected by reduced peripheral frequency selectivity of elderly individuals. This finding has implications for the understanding of the listening difficulties experienced by elderly individuals in cocktail-party situations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11548044 DOI: 10.1080/00305364.2001.11745235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Audiol ISSN: 0300-5364