| Literature DB >> 25085610 |
Shahram Moradi1, Björn Lidestam2, Mathias Hällgren3, Jerker Rönnberg4.
Abstract
This study compared elderly hearing aid (EHA) users and elderly normal-hearing (ENH) individuals on identification of auditory speech stimuli (consonants, words, and final word in sentences) that were different when considering their linguistic properties. We measured the accuracy with which the target speech stimuli were identified, as well as the isolation points (IPs: the shortest duration, from onset, required to correctly identify the speech target). The relationships between working memory capacity, the IPs, and speech accuracy were also measured. Twenty-four EHA users (with mild to moderate hearing impairment) and 24 ENH individuals participated in the present study. Despite the use of their regular hearing aids, the EHA users had delayed IPs and were less accurate in identifying consonants and words compared with the ENH individuals. The EHA users also had delayed IPs for final word identification in sentences with lower predictability; however, no significant between-group difference in accuracy was observed. Finally, there were no significant between-group differences in terms of IPs or accuracy for final word identification in highly predictable sentences. Our results also showed that, among EHA users, greater working memory capacity was associated with earlier IPs and improved accuracy in consonant and word identification. Together, our findings demonstrate that the gated speech perception ability of EHA users was not at the level of ENH individuals, in terms of IPs and accuracy. In addition, gated speech perception was more cognitively demanding for EHA users than for ENH individuals in the absence of semantic context.Entities:
Keywords: cognition; gating paradigm; hearing aid users; speech perception
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25085610 PMCID: PMC4227697 DOI: 10.1177/2331216514545406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Hear ISSN: 2331-2165 Impact factor: 3.293
Brands and Models of Hearing Aids Used by EHA Users.
| Hearing aid | BTE, ITE, or RITE | Number of participants |
|---|---|---|
| Phonak, Versata Art micro | BTE | 4 |
| Oticon, Vigo Pro T | BTE | 3 |
| Widex, Clear C4-9 | BTE | 2 |
| Beltone, True9 45-DPW | ITE | 1 |
| Oticon, Hit Pro 13 | BTE | 1 |
| Oticon, Hit Pro 312 | BTE | 1 |
| Oticon, Vigo Pro Power | RITE | 1 |
| Oticon, Syncro T | BTE | 1 |
| Oticon, Tego | BTE | 1 |
| Oticon, Tego Pro | BTE | 1 |
| Oticon, Vigo | RITE | 1 |
| Oticon, Vigo Pro 312 | BTE | 1 |
| Phonak, Exelia Art | ITE | 1 |
| Phonak, Exelia Art M | BTE | 1 |
| Phonak, Exelia Art micro | BTE | 1 |
| Phonak, Exelia Art Petite | ITE | 1 |
| Phonak, Versata Art M | BTE | 1 |
| Widex, Senso Vita SV-9 VC | BTE | 1 |
Note. BTE = behind-the-ear; ITE = in-the-ear; RITE = receiver-in-the-ear
Means and Standard Deviations for Hearing Thresholds and Pure-Tone Averages (in dB HL) for EHA Users and ENH Individuals.
| Group | 125 Hz ( | 250 Hz ( | 500 Hz ( | 1000 Hz ( | 2000 Hz ( | 4000 Hz ( | 8000 Hz ( | PTA ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EHA | ||||||||
| Right ear (dB HL) | 27.50 (13.35) | 26.04 (13.35) | 28.96 (10.93) | 36.46 (10.37) | 49.17 (8.81) | 59.38 (9.24) | 65.00 (13.83) | 41.79 (6.18) |
| Left ear (dB HL) | 30.63 (13.21) | 30.21 (15.78) | 31.46 (14.02) | 36.25 (10.56) | 53.13 (11.96) | 62.50 (10.00) | 70.83 (15.01) | 45.00 (6.33) |
| ENH | ||||||||
| Right ear (dB HL) | 8.75 (3.69) | 9.58 (3.27) | 11.25 (3.04) | 15.42 (3.27) | 18.96 (2.54) | 23.33 (3.81) | 37.29 (4.42) | 17.80 (2.26) |
| Left ear (dB HL) | 9.17 (3.19) | 10.21 (3.12) | 12.08 (2.92) | 15.21 (3.12) | 19.79 (3.12) | 25.83 (3.51) | 38.33 (4.58) | 18.66 (2.51) |
Note. PTA = pure-tone averages; EHA = elderly hearing aid; ENH = elderly normal hearing.
Figure 1.Illustration of gating for syllable /ada/.
Means, Standard Deviations, and Significance Levels for EHA Users’ and ENH Individuals’ Age, Years of Formal Education, and Word Comprehension Test and Reading Span Test Results.
| Parameter | EHA | ENH | Inferential statistics EHA vs. ENH ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 72.42 (3.27) | 71.46 (3.12) | |
| Years of formal education | 13.04 (3.03) | 13.46 (2.64) | |
| Word comprehension test | 32.45 (1.22) | 32.83 (1.01) | |
| Reading span test | 12.04 (1.88) | 12.21 (1.89) |
Note. EHA = elderly hearing aid; ENH = elderly normal hearing.
Descriptive and Inferential Statistics for IPs of Consonants, Words, and Final Words in HP and LP Sentences for EHA Users and ENH Individuals.
| Type of gated task | Descriptive statistics | Inferential statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| EHA | ENH | ENH vs. EHA ( | |
| Consonants (ms) | 145.28 (27.02) | 117.46 (18.02) | |
| Words (ms) | 560.34 (34.20) | 502.01 (31.32) | |
| Final words in LP (ms) | 140.40 (23.59) | 122.22 (19.73) | |
| Final words in HP (ms) | 20.20 (3.46) | 20.25 (2.84) | |
Note. EHA = elderly hearing aid; ENH = elderly normal hearing; IP = isolation point; LP = less predictable; HP = highly predictable.
Descriptive and Inferential Statistics for Accuracy of Consonants, Words, and Final Words in HP and LP Sentences for EHA Users and ENH Individuals.
| Type of gated task | Descriptive statistics | Inferential statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| EHA | ENH | ENH vs. EHA ( | |
| Consonants (%) | 80.32 (11.70) | 94.68 (6.45) | |
| Words (%) | 84.76 (8.69) | 98.73 (2.39) | |
| Final words in LP (%) | 96.60 (4.15) | 98.62 (3.18) | |
| Final words in HP (%) | 100.00 (0.00) | 100.00 (0.00) | – |
Note. EHA = elderly hearing aid; ENH = elderly normal hearing; LP = less predictable; HP = highly predictable.
Correlation Matrix for IPs of Gated Speech Tasks and the Reading Span Test Among EHA Users.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Consonants | .61 | .17 | −.07 | −.61 | |
| 2. Words | −.04 | −.19 | −.67 | ||
| 3. Final words in LP sentences | .39 | −.07 | |||
| 4. Final words in HP sentences | .27 | ||||
| 5. Reading span test |
Note. EHA = elderly hearing aid; IP = isolation point; LP = less predictable; HP = highly predictable.
p < .01.
Correlation Matrix for Accuracy of Gated Speech Tasks and the Reading Span Test Among EHA Users.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Consonants | .57 | .24 | – | .53 | |
| 2. Words | .14 | – | .82 | ||
| 3. Final words in LP sentences | – | .14 | |||
| 4. Final words in HP sentences | – | ||||
| 5. Reading span test |
Note. EHA = elderly hearing aid; LP = less predictable; HP = highly predictable. Accuracy in final word identification in HP sentences was 100%; hence, there were no correlations to report for this variable.
p < .01.
Correlation Matrix for IPs of Gated Speech Tasks and the Reading Span Test Among ENH Individuals.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Consonants | .63** | .14 | .07 | −.29 | |
| 2. Words | −.15 | −.12 | −.38 | ||
| 3. Final words in LP sentences | .49 | −.04 | |||
| 4. Final words in HP sentences | .17 | ||||
| 5. Reading span test |
Note. ENH = elderly normal hearing; IP = isolation point; LP = less predictable; HP = highly predictable.
p < .05. **p < .01.
Correlation Matrix for Accuracy of Gated Speech Tasks and the Reading Span Test Among ENH Individuals.
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Consonants | .22 | −.37 | – | −.06 | |
| 2. Words | .01 | – | −.27 | ||
| 3. Final words in LP sentences | – | −.08 | |||
| 4. Final words in HP sentences | – | ||||
| 5. Reading span test |
Note. ENH = elderly normal hearing; LP = less predictable; HP = highly predictable. Accuracy in final word identification in HP sentences was 100%; hence, there were no correlations to report for this variable.