Literature DB >> 34261857

Listening Difficulties in Children With Normal Audiograms: Relation to Hearing and Cognition.

Lauren Petley1,2, Lisa L Hunter1, Lina Motlagh Zadeh1, Hannah J Stewart1,3, Nicholette T Sloat1, Audrey Perdew1, Li Lin1, David R Moore1,4,5.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Children presenting at audiology services with caregiver-reported listening difficulties often have normal audiograms. The appropriate approach for the further assessment and clinical management of these children is currently unclear. In this Sensitive Indicators of Childhood Listening Difficulties (SICLiD) study, we assessed listening ability using a reliable and validated caregiver questionnaire (the Evaluation of Children's Listening and Processing Skills [ECLiPS]) in a large (n = 146) and heterogeneous sample of 6- to 13-year-old children with normal audiograms. Scores on the ECLiPS were related to a multifaceted laboratory assessment of the children's audiological, psycho- and physiological-acoustic, and cognitive abilities. This report is an overview of the SICLiD study and focuses on the children's behavioral performance. The overall goals of SICLiD were to understand the auditory and other neural mechanisms underlying childhood listening difficulties and translate that understanding into clinical assessment and, ultimately, intervention.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional behavioral assessment of children with "listening difficulties" and an age-matched "typically developing" control group. Caregivers completed the ECLiPS, and the resulting total standardized composite score formed the basis of further descriptive statistics, univariate, and multivariate modeling of experimental data.
RESULTS: All scores of the ECLiPS, the SCAN-3:C, a standardized clinical test suite for auditory processing, and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Cognition Toolbox were significantly lower for children with listening difficulties than for their typically developing peers using group comparisons via t-tests and Wilcoxon Rank-Sum tests. A similar effect was observed on the Listening in Spatialized Noise-Sentences (LiSN-S) test for speech sentence-in-noise intelligibility but only reached significance for the Low Cue and High Cue conditions and the Talker Advantage derived score. Stepwise regression to examine the factors contributing to the ECLiPS Total scaled score (pooled across groups) yielded a model that explained 42% of its variance based on the SCAN-3:C composite, LiSN-S Talker Advantage, and the NIH Toolbox Picture Vocabulary, and Dimensional Change Card Sorting scores (F[4, 95] = 17.35, p < 0.001). High correlations were observed between many test scores including the ECLiPS, SCAN-3:C, and NIH Toolbox composite measures. LiSN-S Advantage measures generally correlated weakly and nonsignificantly with non-LiSN-S measures. However, a significant interaction was found between extended high-frequency threshold and LiSN-S Talker Advantage.
CONCLUSIONS: Children with listening difficulties but normal audiograms have problems with the cognitive processing of auditory and nonauditory stimuli that include both fluid and crystallized reasoning. Analysis of poor performance on the LiSN-S Talker Advantage measure identified subclinical hearing loss as a minor contributing factor to talker segregation. Beyond auditory tests, evaluations of children with complaints of listening difficulties should include standardized caregiver observations and consideration of broad cognitive abilities.
Copyright © 2021 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34261857      PMCID: PMC8545703          DOI: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000001076

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ear Hear        ISSN: 0196-0202            Impact factor:   3.570


  57 in total

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3.  I. NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery (CB): introduction and pediatric data.

Authors:  Sandra Weintraub; Patricia J Bauer; Philip David Zelazo; Kathleen Wallner-Allen; Sureyya S Dikmen; Robert K Heaton; David S Tulsky; Jerry Slotkin; David L Blitz; Noelle E Carlozzi; Richard J Havlik; Jennifer L Beaumont; Dan Mungas; Jennifer J Manly; Beth G Borosh; Cindy J Nowinski; Richard C Gershon
Journal:  Monogr Soc Res Child Dev       Date:  2013-08

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5.  Results from a National Central Auditory Processing Disorder Service: A Real-World Assessment of Diagnostic Practices and Remediation for Central Auditory Processing Disorder.

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6.  The contribution of the near and far ear toward localization of sound in the sagittal plane.

Authors:  R A Humanski; R A Butler
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7.  What Is Consciousness?

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Journal:  Nature       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 49.962

8.  Prevalence of clinical referrals having hearing thresholds within normal limits.

Authors:  Sally E Hind; Rachel Haines-Bazrafshan; Claire L Benton; Will Brassington; Beverley Towle; David R Moore
Journal:  Int J Audiol       Date:  2011-06-30       Impact factor: 2.117

9.  Development of auditory processing in 6- to 11-yr-old children.

Authors:  David R Moore; Justin A Cowan; Alison Riley; A Mark Edmondson-Jones; Melanie A Ferguson
Journal:  Ear Hear       Date:  2011 May-Jun       Impact factor: 3.570

10.  Otitis media with effusion in children. Binaural hearing before and after corrective surgery.

Authors:  H C Pillsbury; J H Grose; J W Hall
Journal:  Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg       Date:  1991-07
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  1 in total

1.  Hearing thresholds elevation and potential association with emotional problems among 1,914 children in Beijing, China.

Authors:  Huidi Xiao; Nubiya Amaerjiang; Weiwei Wang; Menglong Li; Jiawulan Zunong; Hui En; Xuelei Zhao; Cheng Wen; Yiding Yu; Lihui Huang; Yifei Hu
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2022-08-04
  1 in total

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