| Literature DB >> 31680828 |
Ryan W McCreery1, Elizabeth A Walker2, Meredith Spratford1, Dawna Lewis1, Marc Brennan3.
Abstract
Objectives: Children with hearing loss listen and learn in environments with noise and reverberation, but perform more poorly in noise and reverberation than children with normal hearing. Even with amplification, individual differences in speech recognition are observed among children with hearing loss. Few studies have examined the factors that support speech understanding in noise and reverberation for this population. This study applied the theoretical framework of the Ease of Language Understanding (ELU) model to examine the influence of auditory, cognitive, and linguistic factors on speech recognition in noise and reverberation for children with hearing loss. Design: Fifty-six children with hearing loss and 50 age-matched children with normal hearing who were 7-10 years-old participated in this study. Aided sentence recognition was measured using an adaptive procedure to determine the signal-to-noise ratio for 50% correct (SNR50) recognition in steady-state speech-shaped noise. SNR50 was also measured with noise plus a simulation of 600 ms reverberation time. Receptive vocabulary, auditory attention, and visuospatial working memory were measured. Aided speech audibility indexed by the Speech Intelligibility Index was measured through the hearing aids of children with hearing loss.Entities:
Keywords: children; hearing aids; hearing loss; noise; reverberation; speech recognition
Year: 2019 PMID: 31680828 PMCID: PMC6803493 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2019.01093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Participant characteristics.
| Number | 50 | 56 | |
| Sex | Female = 23, Male = 27 | Female = 23, Male = 33 | |
| Maternal education level | 15.5 years of education | 15.3 years of education | |
| Grade | 1st grade = 32; 3rd grade = 18 | 1st grade = 28; 3rd grade = 28 | |
| Age (Years) | 1st grade—M = 7.5 ( | 1st grade—M = 7.5 ( | |
| PPVT standard score | Mean = 112.7 | Mean = 111.6 | |
| NEPSY attention scaled score | Mean = 9.1 | Mean = 9.0 | |
| AWMA OOO standard score | Mean = 110.9 | Mean = 111.7 | |
| Age of confirmation of hearing loss | N/A | Mean = 12.7 months, | |
| Age of HA fitting | N/A | Mean = 16.4 months | |
| Better-ear PTA | N/A | Mean = 45.6 dB HL | |
| Better-ear aided SII | N/A | Mean = 0.77 | |
| Average hours of HA use per day | N/A | Mean = 9.88 | |
| RMS error | Mean left ear = 5.09; |
PPVT, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; NEPSY Attention, NEPSY Auditory Attention subtest; AWMA OOO, Automated Working Memory Assessment Odd-One-Out subtest; HL, Hearing Level; PTA, Pure-tone average hearing thresholds at 500, 1,000, 2,000, and 4,000 Hz; SII, Speech-intelligibility index for average speech (60 or 65 dB SPL) at one meter with hearing aids; Hearing aid use based on hearing aid data logging or parent report. RMS error is the geometric mean of the deviations of the hearing aid output from prescriptive target at 500, 1,000, 2,000, and 4,000 Hz. Listener sex was compared using a X.
Figure 1Peabody Picture Vocabulary standard scores for children with hearing loss (HL; green) and children with normal hearing (NH; blue). Box plots represent the median (middle line) and interquartile range of the data. The colored regions around each box blot are symmetrical representations of the distribution of data points in each condition.
Figure 3Automated Working Memory Assessment Odd-One-Out subtest standard scores for children with hearing loss (HL; green) and children with normal hearing (NH; blue). Box plots represent the median (middle line) and interquartile range of the data. The colored regions around each box blot are symmetrical representations of the distribution of data points in each condition.
Pearson correlations between speech recognition, cognition, and linguistic factors for all children.
| SNR50—N | |||||
| SNR50—N + R | 0.801 | ||||
| PPVT | −0.460 | −0.452 | |||
| NEPSY attention | −0.258 | −0.264 | 0.243 | ||
| AWMA | −0.324 | −0.309 | 0.445 | 0.332 |
SNR50, Signal-to-noise ratio for 50% correct; N, Noise; R, Reverberation; PPVT, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; NEPSY Attention, NEPSY Auditory Attention subtest; AWMA OOO, Automated Working Memory Assessment Odd-One-Out subtest
p < 0.05.
Figure 4The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for 50% correct sentence recognition for children with hearing loss (HL; green) and children with normal hearing (NH; blue). The top panel shows data for noise, and the bottom panel shows data for noise + reverberation. Box plots represent the median (middle line) and interquartile range of the data. The colored regions around each box blot are symmetrical representations of the distribution of data points in each condition.
Linear mixed model for predictors of SNR50 for all children.
| Subject type (NH vs. HL) | −8.1 | −10.5 to −6.34 | |
| Grade (1st vs. 3rd) | 3.11 | 0.25 to 6.4 | 0.064 |
| Reverberation (None vs. RT60 = 600 ms) | 5.5 | 1.25 to 6.5 | |
| NEPSY attention | −0.24 | −0.65 to 0.30 | 0.226 |
| AWMA OOO | −0.33 | −0.59 to −0.07 | |
| PPVT | −0.25 | −0.45 to −0.05 | |
| Subject type x reverberation | −1.19 | −1.98 to −0.24 | 0.41 |
| Residual variance (σ2) | 25.17 | ||
| Subject variance | 31.24 | ||
PPVT, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; NEPSY Attention, NEPSY Auditory Attention subtest; AWMA OOO, Automated Working Memory Assessment Odd-One-Out subtest; Estimates represent the coefficients for each variable in the model. For categorical predictors, the estimate represents the mean difference. For continuous predictors, the estimate represents the change in SNR50 for a one unit change in the predictor. All p-values for significant effects are bolded.
Pearson correlation between speech recognition and auditory variables, cognition, and linguistic factors for children with hearing loss.
| SNR50 – Noise | |||||||
| SNR50 – N + R | 0.737 | ||||||
| PPVT | −0.457 | −0.351 | |||||
| NEPSY attention | −0.222 | −0.245 | 0.121 | ||||
| AWMA OOO | −0.420 | −0.321 | 0.323 | 0.245 | |||
| Better-ear aided SII | −0.210 | −0.305 | 0.325 | 0.111 | 0.032 | ||
| Better-ear PTA | 0.073 | 0.032 | −0.206 | −0.162 | −0.092 | −0.846 |
SNR50, Signal-to-noise ratio for 50% correct; N+R, Noise plus reverberation; PPVT, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; NEPSY Attention, NEPSY Auditory Attention subtest; AWMA OOO, Automated Working Memory Assessment Odd-One-Out subtest; Better-ear SII, Aided SII for 60 or 65 dB SPL speech signal; Better-ear PTA, Audiometric pure-tone average of thresholds at 500–4,000 Hz in the better ear
p < 0.05 (after adjustment for False Discovery Rate).
Linear regression models for the mediation effects of language and audibility on SNR50 in reverberation for children with hearing loss.
| PPVT | −0.32 | −0.15 to −0.55 | |
| Better-Ear aided SII | −4.85 | −3.21 to −5.34 | |
| PPVT | −0.28 | −0.10 to 0.42 | |
| Better-Ear aided SII | −5.43 | −3.4 to −7.1 | |
SNR50-R, SNR-50 for the reverberation condition; Better-Ear SII; PPVT, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test; Estimates represent the coefficients for each variable in the model. For continuous predictors, the estimate represents the change in SNR50 for a one unit change in the predictor. All p-values for significant effects are bolded.