| Literature DB >> 33281586 |
Srikanta K Mishra1, Udit Saxena2.
Abstract
Immature auditory perception in children has generally been ascribed to deficiencies in cognitive factors, such as working memory and inattention. This notion appears to be commonly accepted for all children despite limited empirical evidence. In the present work, we examined whether working memory capacity would predict basic aspects of hearing, pure-tone frequency discrimination and temporal gap detection, in typically-developing, normal-hearing children (7-12 years). Contrary to our expectation, working memory capacity, as measured by digit spans, or intrinsic auditory attention (on- and off-task response variability) did not consistently predict the individual variability in auditory perception. Present results provide no evidence for a role of working memory capacity in basic measures of auditory perception in children. This lack of a relationship may partly explain why some children with perceptual deficits despite normal audiograms (commonly referred to as auditory processing disorders) may have typical cognitive abilities.Entities:
Keywords: auditory development; auditory memory; auditory processing; digit span; frequency discrimination; gap detection; temporal resolution
Year: 2020 PMID: 33281586 PMCID: PMC7689342 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.591101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Partial correlations between auditory and working memory measures.
| Frequency discrimination | 0.14 (−0.21 | 0.14 | 0.16 | 0.04 |
| Gap detection | 0.15 (−0.20ns,
| −0.12 (0.06ns,
| 0.02 | 0.08 |
One-tailed tests (n = 26); previous findings are in the parenthesis.
Sharma et al. (.
Moore et al. (.
Ahmmed et al. (.
Tomlin et al. (.
p < 0.001;
r = 0.42, p = 0.013 without controlling for age; ns, not significant.
Mean and standard deviations in the parenthesis for auditory and working memory measures.
| Pure-tone average (dB HL) | 8.24 (4.66) | 6.54 (5.16) | 7.76 (4.74) |
| Frequency discrimination (ΔF%) | 4.88 (2.26) | 1.29 (0.64) | 0.92 (0.24) |
| Gap detection (ms) | 4.33 (1.46) | 3.91 (1.06) | 3.62 (1.75) |
| Forward digits | 5.28 (0.56) | 6.11 (0.86) | 6.57 (0.77) |
| Backward digits | 4.60 (0.86) | 5.32 (1.05) | 5.58 (0.90) |
| Test-retest FD (ΔF%) | 1.62 (1.18) | 0.67 (0.65) | 0.33 (0.20) |
| Test-retest GD (ms) | 1.75 (1.06) | 0.98 (0.92) | 1.13 (0.79) |
Figure 1Box-Whisker plots showing (A) digit span scores (for forward and backward span), (B) frequency discrimination (FD) thresholds, expressed as a percent of the standard frequency (1,000 Hz), (C) gap detection (GD) thresholds (ms), test-retest differences for (D) FD, and (E) GD thresholds; ordinate is (safe) log-scaled for all but digit span. Horizontal lines indicate the median, boxes span from the 25th to 75th percentile, and whiskers show the maximum and minimum values. Separate data points are outliers. The numbers on top show the included data and were same for FD and GD thresholds. Significant differences between groups are indicated at the top part of the figure (*p < 0.05, †p < 0.01, ‡p < 0.001).
Figure 2Box-Whisker plots showing thresholds, digit span scores, and test-retest differences for lower and higher (poor) threshold groups for children based on median FD (upper panel) and GD thresholds (lower panel); ordinate is (safe) log-scaled for all but digit span. Horizontal lines indicate the median, boxes span from the 25th to 75th percentile, and whiskers show the maximum and minimum values. Separate data points are outliers.