| Literature DB >> 27047370 |
Rachel V Wayne1, Cheryl Hamilton1, Julia Jones Huyck2, Ingrid S Johnsrude3.
Abstract
Understanding speech in the presence of background sound can be challenging for older adults. Speech comprehension in noise appears to depend on working memory and executive-control processes (e.g., Heald and Nusbaum, 2014), and their augmentation through training may have rehabilitative potential for age-related hearing loss. We examined the efficacy of adaptive working-memory training (Cogmed; Klingberg et al., 2002) in 24 older adults, assessing generalization to other working-memory tasks (near-transfer) and to other cognitive domains (far-transfer) using a cognitive test battery, including the Reading Span test, sensitive to working memory (e.g., Daneman and Carpenter, 1980). We also assessed far transfer to speech-in-noise performance, including a closed-set sentence task (Kidd et al., 2008). To examine the effect of cognitive training on benefit obtained from semantic context, we also assessed transfer to open-set sentences; half were semantically coherent (high-context) and half were semantically anomalous (low-context). Subjects completed 25 sessions (0.5-1 h each; 5 sessions/week) of both adaptive working memory training and placebo training over 10 weeks in a crossover design. Subjects' scores on the adaptive working-memory training tasks improved as a result of training. However, training did not transfer to other working memory tasks, nor to tasks recruiting other cognitive domains. We did not observe any training-related improvement in speech-in-noise performance. Measures of working memory correlated with the intelligibility of low-context, but not high-context, sentences, suggesting that sentence context may reduce the load on working memory. The Reading Span test significantly correlated only with a test of visual episodic memory, suggesting that the Reading Span test is not a pure-test of working memory, as is commonly assumed.Entities:
Keywords: Cogmed; cognitive training; reading span; speech perception; speech-in-noise; working memory training
Year: 2016 PMID: 27047370 PMCID: PMC4801856 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2016.00049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Description of different versions of the Reading Span test.
| Daneman and Carpenter, | Oral or read from card | Final word in series | Semantic (yes/no) | Fail all three items in set | Span at which items are correctly reported for 2/3 sentences in a set |
| Baddeley et al., | Oral | Subject or object of sentence (as cued) | Factual (true/false) | N/A | # of items recalled in correct serial order |
| Rönnberg et al., | Read from computer | Final word in series | Semantic (yes/no) | N/A | # Correct items recalled/maximum score |
| Conway et al., | Read from computer | Unrelated word presented at end of each sentence | None; must score better than 50% on comprehension post-test | N/A | # of items recalled in correct serial order, weighted by the number of items within a series (e.g., two points per correct two-item series) |
| Towse et al., | Read from computer; subjects provide a word to complete sentence | Completion word provided by subjects (integrated word condition), or unrelated target word provided (independent word condition) | None | Fail all three items in set | # of words correctly recalled |
Figure 1Study design. Participants were split into two groups and tested at three time points: at baseline, and following each of two 25-session training blocks. The A–P group received adaptive training followed by placebo training, whereas the P–A group received the placebo training followed by adaptive training.
Figure 2Dissociating training from practice effects. Our cross-over design allowed us to dissociate training effects from practice effects, within-subjects, by aggregating across the two 5-week blocks of training (T1-T0 and T2-T1). A–P refers to the group receiving adaptive training after baseline testing, followed by placebo training, whereas P–A refers to placebo training followed by adaptive training. Note that this is a hypothetical outcome.
Summary of cognitive tests and outcome measures.
| Working memory | Three, four, six, and eight boxes are dispersed on the screen. Subjects search for blue tokens hidden inside one of the boxes. Only one blue token is hidden at a time, without replacement (subjects must remember which boxes have produced a token). | ||
| Working memory | White squares (boxes) are arranged in a variable sequence on screen. Subjects touch the boxes in the order in which they changed color. The length of the sequence begins at two and increases adaptively up to nine boxes. In reverse mode, subjects touch the boxes in the reverse order that they changed color. | The longest sequence successfully recalled by the subject, calculated for both the forward and reverse modes. | |
| Working memory | Subjects repeat back a string of letters and numbers in numerical order, followed by alphabetical order. The number of items in a string increases from 2 to 8 letters and digits. | ||
| Reading Span | Working memory (complex test) | Subjects read aloud a series of unconnected sentences. After each sentence, subjects indicate whether the sentence made sense or not (e.g., “the girl sang a song” vs. “the train sang a song”) to prevent rehearsal of items. At the end of a series, they recall the last word of each sentence. The span of the series begins at 3 and increases to 6. | |
| Semantic/Category Fluency | Category fluency/processing speed | Subjects name as many animals, fruits, or vegetables as possible within 60 s. | Total number of correct items named. |
| Paired Associate Learning Test (PAL) | Episodic memory | Subjects are presented with two, three, six, and eight boxes displayed on the screen that open one at a time in a randomized order to reveal a pattern. Respondents must select the box in which each pattern appeared. | |
| Stop Signal Task (SST) | Inhibition | Subjects make a two-choice button response, but withhold their response of a beep is heard on a trial. The timing of the auditory stop signal is set such that the subject is able to stop successfully approximately 50% of the time. | |
| Reaction Time (RTI) | Motor/processing speed | Subjects respond to a yellow dot appearing on the screen. In simple reaction time, the dot appears in a circle in the center of the screen, and in five-choice reaction time, the spot appears in any one of five circles located concentrically to the center of the screen. | |
| Rapid Visual Information Processing (RVP) | Sustained visual attention | Digits from 2 to 9 appear in a box in the center of the screen in a pseudo-random order, at the rate of 100 digits per minute. Subjects are required to make a button press response to all of three target sequences (2-4-6, 3-5-7, or 4-6-8). |
This table lists cognitive tests repeated across the three time points, with a brief description of each test and outcome measures used. Bolded tests assess near-transfer (i.e., working memory ability), whereas the remainder of tests assess far-transfer to other cognitive domains. Tests with
are taken from the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated battery (CANTAB).
Outcome measures with
are reverse coded (such that a lower value reflects a higher score).
Means and standard deviations for all outcome measures.
| Montreal Cognitive Assessment | 27.85 (1.77) | 27.15 (1.57) | ||||
| Raven (Raw Score) | 50.92 (6.51) | 51.27 (6.02) | ||||
| Speech Spatial Qualities: Speech | 8.21 (0.77) | 6.95 (1.24) | ||||
| Speech Spatial Qualities: Qualities | 8.79 (0.55) | 8.04 (0.89) | ||||
| Spatial Working Memory (Between Errors) | 23.46 (15.59) | 20.46 (13.35) | 23.31 (13.79) | 22.62 (10.97) | 18.15 (13.67) | 21.82 (11.30) |
| Spatial Working Memory (Strategy) | 30.31 (7.47) | 30.38 (5.94) | 33.00 (5.34) | 32.23 (4.34) | 28.46 (5.17) | 32.27 (4.33) |
| Spatial Span (Forward) | 6.23 (1.17) | 6.85 (1.46) | 6.62 (1.12) | 5.69 (0.95) | 6.38 (1.33) | 6.64 (1.21) |
| Spatial Span (Reverse) | 5.62 (1.39) | 6.54 (1.20) | 6.69 (1.60) | 5.85 (0.90) | 5.70 (1.11) | 6.36 (1.43) |
| Letter-Number Sequencing (Raw Score) | 20.39 (2.14) | 21.23 (2.49) | 22.46 (2.93) | 20.31 (1.60) | 21.23 (2.49) | 21.00 (1.18) |
| Letter-Number Sequencing (Longest) | 6.00 (0.91) | 6.15 (1.14) | 6.62 (0.87) | 5.61 (0.87) | 5.85 (0.99) | 5.82 (0.60) |
| Reading Span | 21.15 (3.29) | 24.65 (5.67) | 26.69 (6.28) | 21.84 (5.51) | 24.85 (6.20) | 23.10 (6.17) |
| Reading Span (Longest) | 1.62 (1.56) | 2.77 (1.30) | 2.69 (1.25) | 2.23 (1.59) | 2.69 (1.25) | 2.00 (1.61) |
| Fluency | 19.31 (3.97) | 22.00 (7.43) | 20.62 (4.27) | 16.54 (4.35) | 18.08 (3.75) | 22.73 (9.69) |
| Paired Associate Learning (Errors, Adj.) | 18.08 (16.98) | 14.92 (13.47) | 11.77 (8.45) | 16.54 (14.24) | 16.31 (11.24) | 16.18 (12.69) |
| Paired Associate Learning (Errors, 8 Shapes adj.) | 13.92 (13.09) | 11.15 (11.46) | 9.08 (6.06) | 12.00 (11.63) | 12.15 (10.38) | 10.64 (9.22) |
| Stop Signal Task (Direction Errors) | 5.54 (12.35) | 6.69 (10.03) | 5.00 (4.62) | 1.23 (1.96) | 2.54 (4.13) | 1.45 (1.86) |
| Stop Signal Task (Prop. Successful Stops) | 0.51 (0.08) | 0.51 (0.09) | 0.52 (0.10) | 0.56 (0.06) | 0.54 (0.99) | 0.55 (0.07) |
| Stop Signal Task (Median Correct, Go Trials) | 540.77 (133.89) | 503.85 (151.14) | 489.92 (166.21) | 568.04 (120.45) | 548.88 (124.47) | 537.41 (127.49) |
| Stop Signal Task (Stop Signal Delay) | 323.73 (185.57) | 284.24 (167.12) | 292.06 (180.18) | 351.58 (126.39) | 365.86 (150.60) | 372.84 (140.86) |
| Stop Signal Task (Reaction Time) | 217.03 (78.00) | 219.61 (58.69) | 197.87 (44.61) | 216.46 (55.57) | 183.02 (44.78) | 164.57 (33.75) |
| Reaction Time (Five-Choice Movement Time) | 381.67 (96.93) | 399.09 (89.58) | 345.79 (99.88) | 462.10 (123.27) | 385.50 (98.41) | 377.20 (89.79) |
| Reaction Time (Five-Choice Reaction Time) | 336.98 (53.97) | 334.08 (53.97) | 311.97 (42.79) | 350.85 (40.14) | 342.64 (45.41) | 309.78 (29.82) |
| Rapid Visual Processing (A′) | 0.92 (0.05) | 0.93 (0.03) | 0.93 (0.04) | 0.92 (0.06) | 0.93 (0.05) | 0.93 (0.06) |
| BUG % Accuracy (+3 dB SNR) | 38.07 (11.11) | 35.36 (9.87) | 35.90 (9.58) | 35.47 (11.71) | 36.35 (10.12) | 34.97 (10.09) |
| BUG % Accuracy (+6 dB SNR) | 42.87 (10.11) | 41.20 (9.05) | 41.99 (9.24) | 45.59 (9.76) | 44.93 (14.28) | 44.59 (12.72) |
| Low-Context Sentences (+3 dB SNR) | 42.62 (17.01) | 38.09 (15.41) | 42.39 (13.32) | 37.33 (17.28) | 38.26 (15.48) | 39.61 (13.45) |
| Low-Context Sentences (+6 dB SNR) | 64.25 (18.56) | 60.25 (15.83) | 66.46 (15.56) | 61.46 (16.46) | 57.56 (21.65) | 59.68 (20.02) |
| High-Context Sentences (+3 dB SNR) | 75.24 (11.26) | 65.64 (13.97) | 73.97 (16.71) | 70.16 (18.20) | 65.96 (23.65) | 68.13 (23.34) |
| High-Context Sentences (+6 dB SNR) | 87.23 (7.88) | 85.11 (13.09) | 88.90 (6.11) | 82.92 (15.45) | 85.82 (17.36) | 83.33 (15.75) |
Note that reaction times are provided in milliseconds and speech scores are presented as percentage of words correctly reported (context sentences) or selected (BUG).
Figure 3Accuracy scores for the BUG speech task across the three study time points. Error bars reflect standard error of the mean.
Figure 4Percentage word report scores for high- and low-context sentences across the three study time points. Error bars reflect standard error of the mean.
.
| Reading Span Score | 13.26 | <0.001 | 0.38 | T2 > T0**, T1 > T0** |
| Letter-Number Sequencing Score | 5.81 | <0.05 | 0.21 | T2 > T0* |
| Stop-Signal Task Stop Signal Reaction Time | 4.46 | <0.05 | 0.17 | T2 > T0* |
| Spatial Working Memory Strategy Score | 3.16 | 0.052 | 0.13 | T2 > T1* |
| Reaction Time Five-Choice Movement Time | 6.19 | <0.05 | 0.22 | T2 > T0* |
| Reaction Time Five-Choice Reaction Time | 11.23 | <0.001 | 0.34 | T2 > T0**, T2 > T1** |
| Spatial Span Forward Score | 3.94 | <0.05 | 0.15 | T2 > T0* |
| Spatial Span Reverse Score | 4.37 | <0.05 | 0.17 | T2 > T0* |
| High Context Sentences +3 dB SNR | 8.61 | <0.001 | 0.28 | T0 > T1* |
Correlations between speech tests and (select) cognitive tests.
| 0.81 | ||||||||||||||
| 0.43 | 0.37 | |||||||||||||
| 0.36 | 0.33 | 0.90 | ||||||||||||
| −0.16 | −0.12 | −0.44 | 0.23 | |||||||||||
| 0.31 | 0.28 | 0.46 | 0.46 | −0.33 | ||||||||||
| 0.37 | 0.26 | 0.61 | 0.51 | −0.30 | 0.54 | |||||||||
| −0.54 | −0.36 | −0.66 | −0.69 | 0.32 | −0.32 | −0.31 | ||||||||
| −0.34 | −0.27 | −0.21 | −0.37 | 0.17 | −0.02 | −0.03 | 0.28 | |||||||
| 0.27 | 0.14 | 0.46 | 0.29 | −0.45 | 0.23 | 0.61 | −0.28 | −0.07 | ||||||
| 0.16 | −0.01 | 0.18 | 0.09 | −0.12 | −0.07 | 0.16 | −0.12 | −0.01 | 0.24 | |||||
| 0.31 | 0.14 | 0.26 | 0.11 | −0.34 | −0.23 | 0.06 | −0.17 | −0.06 | 0.33 | 0.55 | ||||
| 0.45 | 0.39 | 0.58 | 0.48 | −0.24 | 0.04 | 0.22 | −0.42 | −0.10 | 0.27 | 0.47 | 0.76 | |||
| −0.20 | −0.42 | −0.41 | −0.44 | −0.13 | −0.19 | −0.13 | 0.25 | −0.06 | 0.04 | 0.11 | −0.00 | −0.50 |
Note that significance levels displayed here are uncorrected for multiple comparisons. RS (Reading Span), RS L (Reading Span Longest Span), LNS (Letter-Number Sequencing), LNS L (Letter-Number Sequencing, Longest Sequence) SWM (Spatial Working Memory), SSP Fwd (Spatial Span Forward), SSP Rev (Spatial Span Reverse), SST SS (Stop Signal Task, Proportion of Successful Stops), BUG (Sentence-matrix speech in noise task), H Context (High-Context sentence word report scores), L Context (Low-Context sentence word report scores), H-L Context (High – low context sentence word report scores).
significant at p < 0.05;
significant at p < 0.01.