Marina M Tawdrous1, Kristen L D'Onofrio2,3, René Gifford2,3, Erin M Picou2,3. 1. School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, 6221Western University, 1151 Richmond St, London, ON, N6A 3K7. 2. Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Graduate School, 5718Vanderbilt University, 1215 21st Ave South, Room 8310, Nashville, TN, 37232. 3. Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, School of Medicine, 12328Vanderbilt University Medical Center, 1215 21st Ave South, Room 8310, Nashville, TN, 37232.
Abstract
The purpose of this project was to evaluate differences between groups and device configurations for emotional responses to non-speech sounds. Three groups of adults participated: 1) listeners with normal hearing with no history of device use, 2) hearing aid candidates with or without hearing aid experience, and 3) bimodal cochlear-implant listeners with at least 6 months of implant use. Participants (n = 18 in each group) rated valence and arousal of pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant non-speech sounds. Listeners with normal hearing rated sounds without hearing devices. Hearing aid candidates rated sounds while using one or two hearing aids. Bimodal cochlear-implant listeners rated sounds while using a hearing aid alone, a cochlear implant alone, or the hearing aid and cochlear implant simultaneously. Analysis revealed significant differences between groups in ratings of pleasant and unpleasant stimuli; ratings from hearing aid candidates and bimodal cochlear-implant listeners were less extreme (less pleasant and less unpleasant) than were ratings from listeners with normal hearing. Hearing aid candidates' ratings were similar with one and two hearing aids. Bimodal cochlear-implant listeners' ratings of valence were higher (more pleasant) in the configuration without a hearing aid (implant only) than in the two configurations with a hearing aid (alone or with an implant). These data support the need for further investigation into hearing device optimization to improve emotional responses to non-speech sounds for adults with hearing loss.
The purpose of this project was to evaluate differences between groups and device configurations for emotional responses to non-speech sounds. Three groups of adults participated: 1) listeners with normal hearing with no history of device use, 2) hearing aid candidates with or without hearing aid experience, and 3) bimodal cochlear-implant listeners with at least 6 months of implant use. Participants (n = 18 in each group) rated valence and arousal of pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant non-speech sounds. Listeners with normal hearing rated sounds without hearing devices. Hearing aid candidates rated sounds while using one or two hearing aids. Bimodal cochlear-implant listeners rated sounds while using a hearing aid alone, a cochlear implant alone, or the hearing aid and cochlear implant simultaneously. Analysis revealed significant differences between groups in ratings of pleasant and unpleasant stimuli; ratings from hearing aid candidates and bimodal cochlear-implant listeners were less extreme (less pleasant and less unpleasant) than were ratings from listeners with normal hearing. Hearing aid candidates' ratings were similar with one and two hearing aids. Bimodal cochlear-implant listeners' ratings of valence were higher (more pleasant) in the configuration without a hearing aid (implant only) than in the two configurations with a hearing aid (alone or with an implant). These data support the need for further investigation into hearing device optimization to improve emotional responses to non-speech sounds for adults with hearing loss.
Permanent, bilateral hearing loss is associated with psychosocial consequences, such
as reduced quality of life (Dalton et al., 2003), increased depressive symptoms (Kramer et al., 2002), and
increased isolation (Hawthorne,
2008). These inter-related psychosocial consequences of hearing loss
might be partly attributable to reduced audibility and difficulty understanding
speech, especially in noise (Humes & Roberts, 1990; Peters et al., 1998; Plomp, 1976). However, everyday listening
and communication experiences are not strictly focused on speech perception. The
perception and recognition of nonlinguistic, affective information is important for
social communication (Kiss
& Ennis, 2001; Zajonc, 1980) and will be referred to hereafter as ‘emotion
recognition.’ Emotion recognition tasks typically involve participant judgement of
the emotion portrayed (e.g., categorical judgement) and can be accomplished with
speech (vocal emotion recognition; e.g., Most & Aviner, 2009) or music (musical
emotion recognition; e.g., Ambert-Dahan et al., 2015). The acoustic cues important for vocal
emotion recognition include mean fundamental frequency (F0), overall level, and F0
variability (e.g., Banse &
Scherer, 1996; Paulmann et al., 2008). For example, anger and elation have high mean F0
and high level (Paulmann et
al., 2008; Pell et
al., 2009), whereas sadness exhibits low level, low mean F0, and little
F0 variability (Juslin &
Laukka, 2003). For music, emotion is conveyed through mode (e.g., major
vs. minor) and tempo (e.g., fast vs. slow; Eerola & Vuoskoski, 2013), where
pleasant songs are more likely to be in a major mode and faster in tempo than
unpleasant or sad ones (Gosselin et al., 2005; Peretz et al., 1998).Adults who have hearing loss demonstrate deficits on emotion recognition tasks. For
example, adults who have bilateral, mild to moderately-severe sensorineural hearing
loss, traditionally considered hearing aid (HA) candidates, demonstrate poorer
performance on tasks of vocal emotion recognition compared to their peers with
better hearing (Christensen et
al., 2019; Singh et
al., 2019). These deficits in bilateral HA users might be attributable to
loss of low-frequency audibility, as performance on these tasks is correlated with
low-frequency audiometric thresholds (e.g., below ∼500 Hz; Rigo & Lieberman, 1989; Singh et al., 2019).
There is also clear evidence that cochlear implant (CI) users demonstrate emotion
recognition deficits for both speech and music stimuli (Caldwell et al., 2015; Chatterjee et al., 2015;
Damm et al., 2019;
Deroche et al.,
2019; D’Onofrio et al.,
2020; Jiam et al.,
2017; Luo et al.,
2007; Shirvani et
al., 2014). Such deficits have largely been attributed to the limitations
of envelope-based signal processing, which prevent sufficient spectro-temporal
detail in the CI-mediated signal (Chatterjee & Peng, 2008; Hsiao & Gfeller, 2012;
Jiam et al., 2017;
Luo et al.,
2007).
Emotional Responses to Sounds
Recognition of emotion in speech and music is not the only way emotion perception
is important for typical functioning. An individual's responses to potentially
emotional events (e.g., bees buzzing, crying, music) have pervasive impacts that
can be measured in a variety of domains, but the effects are asymmetric.
Aversive or unpleasant stimuli prepare a body to respond to negative events
(Taylor, 1991),
facilitate focused attention (Baumeister et al., 2001; Kensinger, 2009), and
even improve speech recognition (Dupuis & Pichora-Fuller, 2014).
Conversely, pleasant stimuli motivate people to approach an event and broaden
attention (Bradley et al.,
2001; Fredrickson & Branigan, 2005), with positive effects on stress
recovery (Alvarsson et al.,
2010; Sandstrom
& Russo, 2010) and creative thinking (Fredrickson, 2001).The dimensional view of emotion provides a convenient framework for measuring the
extent to which an individual is affected by stimuli by having them rate their
response to the stimulus along a combination of two or more dimensions (e.g.,
Faith & Thayer,
2001; Osgood et
al., 1957). Among the available dimensions, valence and arousal often
account for most of the variability in emotion (Bradley & Lang, 1994), where
valence indicates the hedonistic value (pleasant / unpleasant) and arousal
indicates the intensity of the emotion (exciting / calming). Acoustically, level
is a robust cue for arousal; higher level speech and music are perceived as more
exciting (Goudbeek &
Scherer, 2010; Ilie & Thompson, 2006; Laukka et al., 2005; Schmidt, Herzog, et al.,
2016). The acoustic cues supporting ratings of valence are less clear
than those for arousal (Goudbeek & Scherer, 2010; Laukka et al., 2005) and depend on
stimulus type. For example, high-pitched speech and low-pitched music are both
associated with lower ratings of valence than low-pitched speech and
high-pitched music (Ilie
& Thompson, 2006; Schmidt, Herzog, et al., 2016; Schmidt, Janse, et al.,
2016). Similarly, high ratings of pleasantness are elicited by loud
music and quiet speech (Weninger et al., 2013).Using ratings of valence and arousal (rather than categorical judgments of
emotion), evidence suggests CI users demonstrate reduced ratings of arousal
compared to their peers with normal hearing (Ambert-Dahan et al., 2015; Paquette et al.,
2018). Although some investigators report ratings of valence might not be
different between CI users and adults with normal hearing (Ambert-Dahan et al., 2015; Rosslau et al., 2012),
there is also some evidence to suggest CI-users rate speech or music as less
extreme (less pleasant and less unpleasant) than their peers with normal hearing
(Caldwell et al.,
2015; D’Onofrio
et al., 2020; Paquette et al., 2018). Furthermore, the acoustic cues that CI users
rely on for valence ratings are different than those listeners with normal
hearing primarily use, especially in music; CI users rely more heavily on tempo
than on spectral information (Caldwell et al., 2015; D’Onofrio et al.,
2020).Compared to music and speech, relatively less is known about the effects of
hearing loss on emotional responses to non-speech sounds, especially sounds that
are commonly encountered (e.g., birds chirping, glass breaking). For non-speech
sounds, level is also a robust cue for arousal (Buono et al., 2021; Ma et al., 2012),
although the acoustic cues that carry valence of non-speech sounds are less
clear than those for speech or music. For example, despite its role in emotion
perception of speech and music, F0 has not been related to ratings of valence of
non-speech sounds (Picou,
2016; Weninger
et al., 2013). However, changes in spectral content of signals have
been related to changes in ratings of valence; stimuli with more limited
bandwidths have been shown to elicit lower ratings of valence than the same
sounds presented with full bandwidth (Buono et al., 2021; Ma & Thompson,
2015).As with speech and music, emerging work suggests people with hearing loss
demonstrate different emotional responses to non-speech sounds than their peers
with normal hearing (Husain
et al., 2014; Picou & Buono, 2018). For example, Picou (2016) evaluated ratings of
valence and arousal in response to non-speech sounds for similarly aged
listeners with normal hearing (NH) and mild- to moderately-severe bilateral
sensorineural hearing loss. Results indicated that participants with hearing
loss exhibited valence responses that were less extreme (less pleasant and less
unpleasant) than their peers’.To our knowledge, ratings of valence and arousal in response to non-speech sounds
for bimodal CI listeners have not been reported, nor have direct comparisons
between adults with normal hearing, adults who are HA candidates, and adults who
are CI users. Given the work in other areas of emotion perception, is expected
that the effects of hearing loss on emotional responses to these everyday
non-speech sounds will be quite different for adults who are HA candidates (with
normal/mild sloping to moderate/severe sensorineural hearing loss) than for
adults who use a HA in conjunction with a cochlear implant (CI) in the opposite
ear (bimodal CI configuration). Moreover, given the potential for level and
spectral cues to influence ratings of arousal and valence, it is also likely
assistive hearing device configuration might affect emotion perception for
listeners with hearing loss.
Assistive Hearing Device Configurations
It is not clear how to optimize assistive hearing device configurations for
emotion perception. For hearing aid candidates, HAs can improve audibility and
consequently speech recognition (Alcántara et al., 2003; Humes et al., 2002;
Picou et al.,
2013). However, no investigators have reported that the addition of
hearing aids improves emotion recognition performance (Goy et al., 2018; Singh et al., 2019)
or ratings of valence of speech (Schmidt, Herzog, et al., 2016).
Similarly, Picou, Rakita,
et al. (2021) reported no significant benefit of HA use on emotional
responses to non-speech sounds. Instead, HAs reduced ratings of valence in
response to all categories of sounds (pleasant, neutral, unpleasant). Thus,
although HAs improve audibility of sounds and would be expected to improve
ratings of valence, the improvement in audibility might be offset by the
increased loudness of sounds with hearing aids; loud sounds have been shown to
result in low ratings of valence, even if the sounds are expected to be pleasant
(Atias et al.,
2019; Picou,
2016; Picou,
Rakita, et al., 2021).Clinically, bilateral hearing aids are generally recommended for people with
symmetrical hearing loss (for review of current hearing aid fitting standard,
see Picou, Roberts, et al.,
2021), yet patients’ preferences for bilateral hearing aids can be
variable, with estimates of preference ranging from ∼90% (Boymans et al., 2008; Erdman & Sedge,
1981) to only ∼30% (Erdman & Sedge, 1981; Schreurs & Olsen,
1985; Vaughan-Jones et al., 1993). It is possible that one of the reasons
patients might prefer a single HA over bilateral HAs, despite clear benefits for
bilateral HAs on laboratory-based speech recognition tasks (Boymans et al., 2008;
Freyaldenhoven et al.,
2006; Hawkins
& Yacullo, 1984; Köbler et al., 2001; Ricketts et al.,
2019), is related to differences in emotion perception with unilateral or
bilateral hearing aids. Thus, it is important to identify if there are
differences in the emotional responses to sounds for people who are wearing one
or two HAs.For CI users, the challenges of CI-mediated listening could be mitigated in some
cases via the combined use of acoustic and electric stimulation. With the
expansion of CI candidacy criteria in recent years, an increasing number of
patients now have useable, residual hearing. Indeed, approximately 60–72% of
adult CI recipients have some degree of acoustic hearing in the non-CI ear, and
are thus, candidates for bimodal stimulation (Dorman & Gifford, 2010; Holder et al., 2018).
Significant benefit from the addition of acoustic hearing has been shown for
speech recognition (e.g., Dunn et al., 2005; Gifford et al., 2018; Gifford & Dorman,
2019; Potts et
al., 2009; Sladen et al., 2018), perception of suprasegmental features of
speech (Davidson et al.,
2019; Most,
Harel, et al., 2011), music perception (Cheng et al., 2018; Crew et al., 2015;
Cullington & Zeng,
2011; Dorman et
al., 2008; El
Fata et al., 2009; Kong et al., 2005, 2012; Plant & Babic,
2016; Sucher
& McDermott, 2009), emotion recognition of speech sounds (Most, Gaon-Sivan, et al.,
2011), musical sound quality (D'Onofrio & Gifford, 2021), and
musical emotion perception (D’Onofrio et al., 2020; Giannantonio et al., 2015; Shirvani et al.,
2016). The bimodal benefit evidenced in the aforementioned studies - that
is, the improved performance achieved with the contribution of acoustic hearing
(via HA) in the contralateral ear – is largely the result of increased access to
features poorly transmitted via the CI, specifically fundamental frequency (F0;
e.g., Gifford et al.,
2021; Kong et
al., 2004, 2005) and temporal fine structure (e.g., Kong & Carlyon, 2007; Sheffield & Gifford,
2014). However, it is not clear if bimodal CI benefits extend to
emotional responses to non-speech sounds for CI users.
Purpose
The purpose of this project was two-fold: 1) to evaluate the between-group
differences in emotional responses to non-speech sounds between listeners with
normal hearing, hearing aid candidates, and bimodal CI listeners and 2) to
evaluate the effects of device configuration on emotional responses to
non-speech sounds. To evaluate the effects of group membership, three groups of
listeners were tested with a standard-of-care intervention (no device, bilateral
HAs, or bimodal CI configuration). It was expected that, relative to their peers
with NH, both groups would demonstrate ratings of valence that were less extreme
(less pleasant and less unpleasant), even while using assistive hearing device
technology, due to the continued difficulties with emotion perception adults
exhibit with hearing aids (e.g., Goy et al., 2018; Picou, Rakita, et al.,
2021; Singh et
al., 2019) and cochlear implants (Caldwell et al., 2015; D’Onofrio et al.,
2020; Jiam et al.,
2017). Furthermore, based on the noted reduced range with increasing
pure-tone average (Picou
& Buono, 2018), it was expected that bimodal CI listeners would
demonstrate larger deficits (smaller range of emotional responses) than HA
candidates, who typically have lesser degrees of hearing loss.The second purpose was to evaluate the effect of device configuration. For HA
candidates, the configuration options were unilateral or bilateral HA fitting.
Ideally, the range of emotional responses would be broadest under bilateral HA
conditions, given the current clinical recommendations for bilateral fittings in
most cases (e.g., Picou,
Roberts, et al., 2021). For bimodal CI listeners, it was predicted
that emotional responses would be most similar to those of listeners with NH in
the bimodal configuration (CI and contralateral HA) relative to HA- or CI- only
conditions, given the work demonstrating the benefits of a contralateral HA for
emotion perception of music (e.g., D’Onofrio et al., 2020; Giannantonio et al.,
2015) and speech (e.g., Most, Gaon-Sivan, et al., 2011).
Methods
Participants
Participants were recruited through review of clinic records in the Department of
Audiology at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and through mass e-mail
solicitation to the Vanderbilt University Medical Center community. Three groups
of 18 adults participated: 1) listeners with NH, 2) HA candidates, and 3)
bimodal CI listeners. Table 1 displays demographic information and Figure 1 displays pure-tone air
conduction thresholds for the three groups. All participants denied neurogenic
disorders, pharmacologic treatment for mood disorders, or cognitive decline. All
participants demonstrated low risk of clinical depression, as assessed using the
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (Zigmond & Snaith, 1983). Table 1 reveals the
participant groups were matched on the measures of anxiety, depression, and
perceived ability to recognize vocal emotion, yet they differed based on degree
of hearing loss, hearing aid experience, and duration of hearing loss. In
addition, the groups differed slightly in age and gender, where HA candidates
were approximately 9 years older than the other two groups and there were more
females in the group of NH listeners than in the two groups of participants with
hearing loss. Detailed demographic data for all participants are displayed in
Appendix A (listeners with NH), Appendix B (HA candidates), and Appendix C
(bimodal CI listeners). Testing was conducted with approval from the
Institutional Review Board at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Participants
were compensated for their time at an hourly rate.
Table 1.
Participant Demographics for the Three Groups of Listeners
(n = 18 in Each Group).
Characteristic
Normal Hearing, N = 171
Hearing Aid Candidates, N = 151
Bimodal Listeners, N = 171
p-value2
Age
Years
55.18 (10.01)
64.00 (5.26)
55.41 (18.52)
0.012
Gender
Female
14 (82%)
7 (47%)
7 (41%)
0.032
Male
3 (18%)
8 (53%)
10 (59%)
PTA
dB HL
13.06 (3.54)
38.47 (10.32)
71.53 (17.00)
<0.001
Duration of hearing loss
Years
11.73 (14.34)
22.15 (16.94)
0.029
HADS-A
Score
6.12 (2.91)
5.53 (3.76)
6.00 (4.47)
0.83
HADS-A
Score
1.76 (1.48)
3.47 (3.34)
3.93 (2.76)
0.10
EmoCheq
Score
35.06 (15.11)
39.93 (17.17)
43.93 (13.68)
0.17
Devices
None
17 (100%)
4 (27%)
0 (0%)
<0.001
One
0 (0%)
1 (6.7%)
0 (0%)
Two
0 (0%)
10 (67%)
17 (100%)
Hearing aid experience
Yes
11 (73%)
17 (100%)
0.038
Hearing aid use
Years
6.15 (10.34)
13.84 (9.80)
0.028
Cochlear implant use
Years
3.42 (3.52)
Cochlear implant
Cochlear
8 (47%)
Advanced Bionics
9 (53%)
Mean (SD); n (%),
Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test; Pearson's Chi-squared test;
Fisher's exact test, Note: PTA = better ear,
pure-tone average (0.5, 1, 2, 4 kHz); HADS = Hospital Anxiety and
Depression Scale.
Figure 1.
Audiometric thresholds for the NH, HA, and bimodal groups. Group mean
thresholds are shown in black. For listeners with normal hearing and
hearing aid candidates, mean right and left ear thresholds are
displayed. For bimodal CI listeners, thresholds for the non-implanted
ear are displayed.
Audiometric thresholds for the NH, HA, and bimodal groups. Group mean
thresholds are shown in black. For listeners with normal hearing and
hearing aid candidates, mean right and left ear thresholds are
displayed. For bimodal CI listeners, thresholds for the non-implanted
ear are displayed.Participant Demographics for the Three Groups of Listeners
(n = 18 in Each Group).Mean (SD); n (%),
Kruskal-Wallis rank sum test; Pearson's Chi-squared test;
Fisher's exact test, Note: PTA = better ear,
pure-tone average (0.5, 1, 2, 4 kHz); HADS = Hospital Anxiety and
Depression Scale.
Hearing Aid Fitting
Hearing Aid Candidates
For the purpose of this study, users were fit with research HAs
(behind-the-ear, Phonak Ambra V90). The HAs were coupled using foam,
non-custom eartips (ComplyTM), which resulted in occluding
fittings for most participants. The HAs were programed for each participant
according to prescriptive targets from the National Acoustic Laboratories –
Nonlinear v 2 (NAL-NL2; Keidser et al., 2012) for a bilateral fitting. Fittings were
verified using recorded speech passages presented at 65 dB SPL and a
probe-microphone verification system (Audioscan Verifit). One participant, a
70 year old male, was under fit by 7 dB at 4000 Hz in the right ear.
Otherwise, all fittings were within 5 dB of NAL-NL2 prescriptive targets
250–4000 Hz. All advanced digital features were deactivated (digital noise
reduction, wind reduction, speech enhancement, frequency lowering), except
feedback reduction, which was personalized for each participant. The HA
microphone was set to be mildly directional, with an average directivity
index designed to overcome the microphone location effects of a
behind-the-ear instrument. Participants in the HA group completed testing
described below with two HAs (bilateral condition) and one HA (unilateral
condition). In the unilateral condition, one HA was removed and that ear was
unoccluded; the left ear was the test ear for half of the participants.
Bimodal CI Listeners
Bimodal CI listeners were also fitted with a behind-the-ear research HA for
the purpose of the study (Phonak Bolero V90-SP). The HA, fitted to the
non-implanted ear, was coupled with a custom, fully-occluding earmold made
for the purpose of this study, or with the participant's own,
fully-occluding earmold if they used a custom mold regularly. Consistent
with the HA group, the advanced features on the HAs used for the bimodal
group were deactivated, with the exception of feedback reduction. As with
the HA group, the microphone was set to be mildly directional. HA gain was
programmed and verified to match NAL-NL2 targets. Match to target was within
10 dB 250–4000 Hz for 10 participants. For 8 participants, adequate gain
could not be achieved for 4000 Hz and real ear aided responses were more
than 10 dB below NAL-NL2 targets.The bimodal CI listeners also used a CI. The CI map was not adjusted for this
study; their existing maps were used. Participants either used an Advanced
Bionics (n = 9) or a Cochlear (n = 9)
implant. In all cases, their ‘Every day’ program was used during testing.
Prior to testing, CI-aided thresholds were completed in the sound field to
warbled pure tones. Thresholds were in the range of 20–30 dB HL from
250–6000 Hz for most qualifying participants. Three participants
demonstrated thresholds up to 40 dB HL.
Stimuli
Participants provided ratings of arousal and valence using the Self-Assessment
Manikin (SAM; Bradley &
Lang, 1994). The SAM is a non-verbal, pictorial tool for measuring
emotion along the dimensions of valence, arousal, and dominance. For each
dimension, the SAM includes 5 cartoon figures representing the range of emotions
along the dimension (e.g., smiling to frowning) and participants make their
ratings on a range of 1 to 9 based on numbers equally spaced under the 5
figures. For this study, only the valence and arousal dimensions were used. For
both dimensions, the captions “how pleasant / unpleasant do you feel” and “how
excited or calm do you feel” were placed above the pictures for valence and
arousal, respectively.Participants rated valence and arousal in response to non-speech sounds from the
International Affective Digitized Sounds Corpus (IADS; Bradley & Lang, 2007). The corpus
includes 167 non-speech examples of animal noises (e.g., cows mooing), human
social noises (e.g., laughter), bodily noises (e.g., belching), environmental
sounds (e.g., office noises), and music (e.g., acoustic guitars). Bradley and Lang
(2007) published ratings of valence, arousal, and dominance elicited
from college students with presumably NH. Of these 167 tokens, 75 were used in
this study. The 75 tokens were the same ones used by our previous studies (Picou, 2016; Picou & Buono,
2018; Picou,
Rakita, et al., 2021). The tokens were modified from their original
format in two ways. First, their duration was shortened from 6 s to 1.5 s by
selecting a representative sample of the token. Second, their levels were
normalized so they all had the same peak level (-3.01 dB relative to the
soundcard maximum). Both modifications were made using Adobe Audition (v CSS5).
Based on the ratings provided by listeners with NH in a previous study (Picou, 2016), the
tokens were assigned to one of three categories, which varied based on their
expected valence (pleasant, neutral, unpleasant). Categories and brief
descriptions of all sounds are displayed in Appendix D. Sounds were presented at
65 dB SPL.
Procedures
Prior to testing, the level was calibrated using a steady-state signal with the
same long-term average spectrum as the stimuli used during testing. A sound
level meter (Amprobe SM-10) at the position of the participant's ear, without a
participant in the room, was used to verify the level. Following informed
consent, participants completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and
then underwent hearing evaluation (pure-tone, air conduction thresholds) and HA
fitting in a quiet, clinic-like environment. Then, they rated valence and
arousal in a sound-attenuating audiometric test booth. Testing was blocked; they
rated valence and arousal in response to all 75 sounds in one condition before
switching conditions or taking a break. Within the condition, sounds in all
three categories were randomly presented. Participants with NH rated sounds in
only one condition (unaided). Participants who were HA users rated sounds in two
conditions (unilateral HA, bilateral HAs). Participants who were bimodal CI
listeners rated sounds in three conditions (HA only, CI only, HA + CI). For
participants who completed more than one condition, their condition order was
counterbalanced. Breaks were provided as needed during testing.
Test Environment
The participant was seated in the center of the audiometric booth
(4.0 × 4.3 × 2.7 m) with a loudspeaker (Tannoy Series 600) placed 1.25 m in
front of the participant. A computer monitor (21.5-in Dell S2240T) was placed
directly below the loudspeaker and in front of the participant. During testing,
the monitor displayed a small, black fixation cross on a white screen during
sound presentation. Immediately after the sound finished, the SAM stimuli for
rating valence were displayed (caption, five pictures, numbers from 1 to 9). A
participant then selected their rating of valence using a keypad (USB; Targus).
Then the SAM stimuli for rating arousal were displayed (caption, five pictures,
numbers from 1 to 9) and participants provided a rating of arousal. When they
were ready to advance, they would press ‘Enter’ and the next sound was
presented. The experimental timing and data collection were controlled using
Presentation (Neurobehavioral Systems v 14) on an experimental computer (Dell)
outside the test booth. The computer monitor inside the test booth displayed a
cloned image of the experimental computer monitor. From the experimental
computer, which stored the stimuli for testing, the sounds were routed to an
audiometer for level control (Madsen Orbiter 922 v.2), to an amplifier
(Russound), and then to the loudspeaker.
Data Analysis
Prior to analysis, five participants were excluded. A computer error prohibited
responses from one participant with NH (54 year old female) from being recorded.
In the group of HA users, two participants (72 year old female, 50 year old
female) provided only one rating (valence or arousal) in all conditions rather
than two ratings (valence and arousal). Also in the HA candidate group, one
participant provided a single rating in one condition (bilateral HA; 70 year old
female). All three participants had no HA experience. In addition, one
participant in the bimodal listener group did not have data recorded due to
experimenter error in the “HA only” condition. Therefore, these participants
were excluded from further analysis.Scores for individual participants were calculated by taking the average rating
of valence or arousal in each stimulus category for each condition. Separate
linear effects models were constructed to address each of the research questions
regarding 1) hearing loss and 2) device configuration. To examine the effect of
the hearing loss on emotion, the models of valence and arousal included a single
between-group factor (NH, HA candidate, bimodal CI listener) and one
within-participant variable (stimulus category; pleasant, neutral, unpleasant).
Prior to analysis, the ratings of valence and arousal were z-score transformed
for each participant in the “maximum” device configuration (no hearing device
for listeners with NH, the bilateral HA condition for HA users, and the bimodal
condition (CI + HA) for the bimodal CI listeners). To examine the effect of
device configuration on emotional responses, the models of valence and arousal
included two within-participant factors, stimulus category and device
configuration. Separate linear mixed effects models were constructed for the HA
candidates (unilateral or bilateral HAs) and bimodal CI listeners (HA only, CI
only, CI + HA), each with participant as a random factor. Analysis of variance
(ANOVA) was conducted on each linear model; significant main effects and
interactions were explored using pairwise comparisons of the estimated marginal
means using Satterthwaite degrees of freedom and false discovery rate correction
(Benjamini &
Hochberg, 1995).All analyses were completed within R (v 4.1.0; R Core Team, 2021), where the linear
mixed-effect models were constructed using the lme4 package (Bates et al., 2015),
the ANOVAs were done using the stats package from base R, and the
estimated marginal means with the pairwise comparisons were done using the
emmeans package (Lenth, 2019).
Results
Differences Between Groups
Transformed ratings of valence and arousal for the listeners with NH, HA
candidates, and bimodal CI listeners are displayed in Figure 2 (left panel). Analysis of
z-score transformed ratings of valence revealed significant contributions of
Category (F [2, 3616] = 575.354, p < 0.001)
and a significant Group × Category interaction (F [4,
3616] = 27.993, p < 0.001). The effect of Group alone was
not significant (F [2, 3616] < 1.0,
p = 1.00). As a result of the significant Group × Category
interaction, the estimated marginal means were calculated on the full model to
evaluate the effect of group membership for each category separately. The
results, displayed in Table 2, reveal significant differences between groups, in response
to pleasant and unpleasant stimuli. Specifically, ratings from HA candidates and
bimodal CI listeners were less extreme (less pleasant, less unpleasant) compared
to listeners with NH. There were no significant effects of group membership in
the neutral stimuli category.
Figure 2.
Normalized ratings of valence (left panel) and arousal (right panel) for
listeners with NH, HA candidates, and bimodal CI listeners. See
Appendices A-C for listeners’ identification code and demographics
details.
Table 2.
Pairwise Comparisons of Ratings of Valence (z-Score).
Stimulus Category
Group Contrast
Estimate
Standard Error
z ratio
p
Pleasant
NH - HA Candidate
0.34
0.06
5.43
<0.0001***
Pleasant
NH - Bimodal Listener
0.44
0.06
7.31
<0.0001***
Pleasant
HA Candidate – Bimodal CI Listener
0.10
0.06
1.66
0.096
Neutral
NH - HA Candidate
0.05
0.08
0.62
0.533
Neutral
NH - Bimodal Listener
0.11
0.08
1.50
0.403
Neutral
HA Candidate - Bimodal Listener
0.07
0.08
0.82
0.533
Unpleasant
NH - HA Candidate
−0.24
0.05
−4.75
<0.0001***
Unpleasant
NH - Bimodal Listener
−0.34
0.05
−7.01
<0.0001***
Unpleasant
HA Candidate - Bimodal Listener
−0.10
0.05
−2.03
0.043*
Note: NH = normal hearing; HA = hearing aid; * indicates
p < 0.05, ** indicates p
< 0.01, *** indicates p < 0.001.
Normalized ratings of valence (left panel) and arousal (right panel) for
listeners with NH, HA candidates, and bimodal CI listeners. See
Appendices A-C for listeners’ identification code and demographics
details.Pairwise Comparisons of Ratings of Valence (z-Score).Note: NH = normal hearing; HA = hearing aid; * indicates
p < 0.05, ** indicates p
< 0.01, *** indicates p < 0.001.Analysis of ratings of arousal revealed significant contribution of Category
(F [2, 3616] = 4.02, p < 0.05) and a
significant Group × Category interaction (F [4, 3616] = 3.39,
p < 0.01). The effect of Group alone was not significant
(F [2, 3616 < 1.0, p = 1.00).
Differences between groups were small and variable (see Figure 2, right panel). Follow-up
pairwise comparisons, displayed in Table 3, revealed only one of the
differences between groups survived adjustment for family-wise error rate.
Bimodal CI listeners rated unpleasant sounds as less arousing than did HA
candidates. These data indicate ratings of arousal were generally not different
between groups.
Table 3.
Pairwise Comparisons of Ratings of Arousal (z-Score).
Stimulus Category
Group Contrast
Estimate
Standard Error
z ratio
p
Pleasant
NH - HA Candidate
0.08
0.07
1.12
0.297
Pleasant
NH - Bimodal Listener
−0.07
0.07
−1.04
0.297
Pleasant
HA Candidate - Bimodal Listener
−0.15
0.07
−2.12
0.102
Neutral
NH - HA Candidate
−0.02
0.09
−0.21
0.830
Neutral
NH - Bimodal Listener
−0.13
0.09
−1.45
0.350
Neutral
HA Candidate - Bimodal Listener
−0.11
0.09
−1.19
0.350
Unpleasant
NH - HA Candidate
−0.05
0.06
−0.78
0.436
Unpleasant
NH - Bimodal Listener
0.10
0.06
1.78
0.113
Unpleasant
HA Candidate - Bimodal Listener
0.15
0.06
2.49
0.038*
Note: NH = normal hearing; HA = hearing aid.
Pairwise Comparisons of Ratings of Arousal (z-Score).Note: NH = normal hearing; HA = hearing aid.
Effect of Device Configuration
Normalized, z-scored ratings of valence and arousal for the group of HA
candidates are displayed in Figure 3. Analysis of ratings of
valence revealed only a significant main effect of Category
(F [2, 2208] = 236.18, p < 0.001).
The effect of Configuration (F [1, 2208] = 1.66,
p = 0.198) and the Configuration × Category interaction
(F [2, 2208] = 0.19, p = 0.828) were
not significant. As expected, ratings in response to pleasant stimuli were
higher than in response to neutral stimuli (M
difference = 0.77 points, p < 0.0001) or unpleasant
stimuli (M difference = 2.00,
p < 0.0001). In addition, ratings were lower in response
to unpleasant sounds than neutral ones (M
difference = 1.23, p < 0.0001). However, these results
demonstrate that ratings were similar with unilateral and bilateral HAs
(M rating difference = −0.11,
p = 0.199).
Figure 3.
Normalized ratings of valence (left panel) and arousal (right panel)
for listeners who are HA candidates. See Appendix B for participant
identification code and demographics details.
Normalized ratings of valence (left panel) and arousal (right panel)
for listeners who are HA candidates. See Appendix B for participant
identification code and demographics details.Analysis of ratings of arousal also revealed only a significant main effect
of Category (F [2, 2208] = 16.68,
p < 0.001) and non-significant effects of Condition
(F [2, 2208] = 0.79, p = 0.3738) and
Category × Condition (F [2, 2208] = 0.34,
p = 0.7125). Pairwise comparison testing revealed
ratings of arousal were higher in response to the unpleasant stimuli than in
response to the neutral stimuli (M difference = 0.44,
p < 0.0001) or the pleasant stimuli
(M difference = 0.37, p < 0.0001),
whereas ratings were not different in response to neutral and pleasant
stimuli (M difference = 0.72, p = 0.4712).
Ratings of arousal were similar with unilateral and bilateral HA fittings
(M rating difference = 0.04,
p = 0.5754).Normalized, z-scored ratings of valence and arousal for the group of bimodal
CI listeners are displayed in Figure 4. Analysis of ratings of
valence revealed significant effects of Configuration (F
[2, 3774] = 13.81, p < 0.001) and Category
(F [2, 3774] = 184.82, p < 0.001),
but no significant Configuration × Category interaction (F
[4, 3774] = 1.57, p = 0.179). Follow-up pairwise comparison
testing revealed that all categories were significantly different from each
other (p < 0.001). In addition, as displayed in Table 4 (top
rows), ratings of valence were higher (more pleasant) with the CI alone
relative to both the HA alone and CI + HA conditions.
Figure 4.
Normalized ratings of valence (left panel) and arousal (right panel)
for bimodal CI listeners. See Appendix C for participant
identification code and demographics details.
Table 4.
Pairwise Comparisons to Evaluate the Effect of Listening
Configuration for Bimodal Listeners. Comparisons are Displayed for
Ratings of Valence (top) and Ratings of Arousal (Bottom).
Rating
Contrast
Estimate
Standard Error
z ratio
p
Valence
CI + HA - CI alone
−0.18
0.04
−4.55
<.0001***
CI + HA - HA alone
−0.04
0.04
−0.99
.324
CI alone - HA alone
0.14
0.04
3.57
<.001***
Arousal
CI + HA - CI alone
0.20
0.04
4.66
.021*
CI + HA - HA alone
0.10
0.04
2.30
<.0001***
CI alone - HA alone
−0.10
0.04
−2.36
.021*
Note: CI = cochlear implant; HA = hearing aid;
*** indicates p < 0.001.
Normalized ratings of valence (left panel) and arousal (right panel)
for bimodal CI listeners. See Appendix C for participant
identification code and demographics details.Pairwise Comparisons to Evaluate the Effect of Listening
Configuration for Bimodal Listeners. Comparisons are Displayed for
Ratings of Valence (top) and Ratings of Arousal (Bottom).Note: CI = cochlear implant; HA = hearing aid;
*** indicates p < 0.001.Analysis of ratings of arousal revealed significant main effects of
Configuration (F [2, 3774] = 9.717,
p < 0.001) and Category (F [2,
3774] = 4.201, p < 0.05), but no significant
Configuration × Category interaction (F [4, 3774] = 1.083,
p = 0.363). Follow-up pairwise comparison testing
revealed that ratings of arousal were higher in response to pleasant stimuli
than with neutral (M difference = 0.11,
p < 0.05) or unpleasant (M
difference = 0.10, p < 0.05) stimuli. Ratings of arousal
were not different in response to neutral or unpleasant stimuli
(M difference = 0.001, p = 0.819). In
addition, as displayed in Table 4 (bottom rows), ratings of
arousal were lower with the CI alone relative to both the HA alone and
CI + HA conditions.
Degree of Acoustic Hearing Loss and Device Configuration
To explore the relationship between degree of hearing loss on ratings of valence,
exploratory correlation analyses were conducted between a participant's better
ear, acoustic, pure-tone average (500, 1000, 2000, 4000 Hz) and ratings of
valence, either with a minimal intervention (unilateral HA or HA alone) or with
a maximum intervention (HA alone or CI + HA configuration). Mean scores in each
condition/category combination were examined to preserve the data in the
original scale. Data from listeners with NH was always unaided. The results,
displayed in Figure 5,
reveal significant negative correlations between degree of hearing loss and
ratings of valence in response to pleasant sounds (p < 0.01)
and positive correlations between degree of hearing loss and ratings of valence
in response to unpleasant sounds (p < 0.01). Importantly,
the pattern of results was the same for both device configurations
(minimal/maximal). These data indicate that, regardless of device configuration,
listeners with more hearing loss were more likely to rate valenced sounds as
less extreme (less pleasant or less unpleasant) than listeners with better
acoustic hearing thresholds.
Figure 5.
Relationship between rating of valence of pleasant, neutral, and
unpleasant stimuli as a function of better ear, pure-tone average (500,
1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz) for participants using minimal intervention
(unilateral HA or HA alone; top panel) or maximal intervention
(bilateral HA or CI + HA; bottom panel).
Relationship between rating of valence of pleasant, neutral, and
unpleasant stimuli as a function of better ear, pure-tone average (500,
1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz) for participants using minimal intervention
(unilateral HA or HA alone; top panel) or maximal intervention
(bilateral HA or CI + HA; bottom panel).
Discussion
The purpose of this project was two-fold: 1) to evaluate the between-group
differences in emotional responses to non-speech sounds between listeners with
normal hearing, hearing aid candidates, and bimodal cochlear-implant listeners and
2) to evaluate the effects of device configuration on emotional responses to
non-speech sounds. Consistent with previous work (Picou, 2016; Picou & Buono, 2018; Picou, Rakita, et al.,
2021), ratings of arousal were largely unaffected by hearing loss or
device configuration. The limited findings related to ratings of arousal might be
due to the importance of level as a cue for arousal (Buono et al., 2021; Ma et al., 2012) and listeners with
hearing loss were always tested with an assistive hearing device, potentially
limiting differences in loudness between groups. The following discussion focuses
primarily on ratings of valence and addresses the effects of group membership and
device configuration separately.
Group Membership
The results of this study replicate those by (Picou, 2016; Picou, Rakita, et al., 2021),
demonstrating that listeners with hearing loss exhibited reduced ratings of
valence in response to non-speech sounds. The results also extend existing
literature by demonstrating that bimodal CI listeners exhibit emotional
responses that are similar to their HA-candidate peers. That is, emotional
responses are also reduced in bimodal CI listeners, presumably as a result of
their hearing acuity and the limited access to acoustic cues important for
emotion perception.Consistent with existing literature with HA users (Picou & Buono, 2018), these
findings confirm that people who have higher unaided hearing thresholds were
more likely to provide ratings of valence that were less extreme (less pleasant
and less unpleasant) relative to people with better hearing thresholds.
Interestingly, the relationship in the current study is nearly identical to that
reported by Picou and Buono
(2018). Specifically, the relationship between pure-tone average and
ratings of valence of pleasant stimuli is described in the current study by the
following formula: valence rating = −0.02x + 6.9, where x = pure-tone average,
and by Picou and Buono
(2018) as: valence rating = −0.02x + 6.97. A similar pattern emerges
for ratings in response to unpleasant sounds, which is described in the current
study by the formula: valence rating = 0.015x + 3.1, and by Picou and Buono (2018)
as: valence rating = 0.01x + 3.22. Together, these data indicate listeners with
more significant hearing loss are more likely to rate sounds as less extreme
(less pleasant, less unpleasant) relative to their peers with better
hearing.Note that the relationships Picou and Buono (2018) described were all unaided, whereas the
current study was aided (bilateral for HA candidates and CI + HA for bimodal CI
listeners). The similarity between the relationships in the two studies suggests
that hearing loss intervention does not mitigate the relationship between degree
of hearing loss and ratings of valence. If an intervention designed to improve
audibility (e.g., HAs) improved ratings of valence, the relationship between
ratings and hearing loss would change (e.g., become non-significant or have a
shallower slope). The non-significant effects of device configuration suggest
that the effects of group membership might not be attributable only to
differences in audibility of the cues that code for emotion (reviewed above).
Indeed, existing evidence in the literature suggests there are more central
changes in emotion processing for adults with hearing loss that are not fully
attributable to sensory processing. For example, CI users demonstrate
neurophysiological changes in late electrophysiological components relative to
adults with NH (Deroche et
al., 2019) and HA candidates demonstrate cortical changes in emotion
perception, as measured using functional imaging technique (Husain et al.,
2014).
Device Configuration
A secondary purpose of this study was to evaluate the potential for changing
the device configuration to affect emotional responses. The findings suggest
that, for HA candidates, using unilateral or bilateral HAs did not affect
emotional responses. The results demonstrate that the second HA did not
contribute to ratings of valence or arousal for HA candidates. These data
demonstrate that the clinical recommendation of fitting bilateral hearing
aids for people with bilateral hearing loss is not contraindicated by the
effect of the number of devices on emotional responses. That is, the number
of hearing aids is irrelevant to the ratings of valence recorded in response
to non-speech sounds. In a recent study by D'Onofrio and Gifford (2021),
listeners with normal hearing likewise did not demonstrate improvement in
musical sound quality ratings when listening with two ears versus one. Thus,
there may simply be little added benefit for subjective judgements of sound
(i.e., sound quality, emotional responses) when the signal presented across
ears is of the same modality and similar quality (two normal hearing ears,
D’Onofrio and
Gifford, 2021; two HA ears with symmetrical hearing loss, current
study). An additional explanation for the non-significant differences
between responses with one and two HAs might be that bilateral benefits
would only be expected for listeners with more significant hearing loss, as
has been demonstrated in speech recognition tasks in the laboratory (e.g.,
Ricketts et al.,
2019). Although a reasonable speculation, the data from the
current study do not support bilateral benefits as dependent on degree of
hearing loss.To our knowledge, our data provide the first examination of bimodal CI
listeners’ emotional responses to emotional stimuli. Our data suggest that
bimodal stimulation interacts with emotional stimuli to affect the emotional
response in a manner that differs from emotion in response to music. In the
current study, ratings of valence were higher in configurations without a
HA. That is, adding a HA to the contralateral ear of the CI participants did
not improve ratings of valence; instead, adding a HA to the non-implanted
ear had a negative effect on ratings of valence. These data were surprising
as they are inconsistent with the large body of evidence demonstrating
bimodal benefit shown for speech recognition (e.g., Dunn et al., 2005; Gifford et al.,
2018; Gifford & Dorman, 2019; Potts et al., 2009; Sladen et al.,
2018), perception of suprasegmental features of speech (e.g.,
Davidson et al.,
2019; Most,
Harel, et al., 2011), music perception (e.g., Cheng et al.,
2018; Crew et
al., 2015; Cullington & Zeng, 2011; Dorman et al., 2008; El Fata et al.,
2009; Kong
et al., 2005, 2012; Plant & Babic, 2016; Sucher & McDermott,
2009), emotion recognition of speech sounds (Most, Gaon-Sivan, et al.,
2011), musical sound quality (D'Onofrio & Gifford, 2021) and
musical emotion perception (Giannantonio et al., 2015; Shirvani et al.,
2016). The findings are also inconsistent with the findings by
D’Onofrio et al.
(2020), who reported the addition of a contralateral hearing aid
for a CI user allowed bimodal CI listeners to use both tempo and mode cues
while rating valence of music, whereas ratings were based primarily on tempo
when using a CI alone.Reasons for this discrepancy are unclear and could be related to how the two
modalities, acoustic and electric, might interfere with emotion. Some have
suggested that integration of acoustic-electric hearing may be better when
combined in the same ear as opposed to across ears for vowel recognition
(Fu et al.,
2017). Other studies, however, have shown no differences in
integration efficiency of acoustic-electric hearing for word and sentence
recognition in quiet and noise (Sheffield et al., 2015; Willis et al.,
2020). The performance of bimodal listening has been previously
discussed to be dependent on the effectiveness of the modalities (CI &
HA) integrating with each other, and that the performances of the two should
complement each other (Yoon et al., 2015).There is also a possibility that there is conflicting middle- to
high-frequency information between HAs and CI (Mok et al., 2006). For bimodal CI
listeners, the CI provides both low- and high-frequency stimulation;
however, amplification via the HA in the contralateral ear is often limited
to low-frequency information, as these individuals typically have sloping
losses. While the added amplification using the current HA fitting practices
may provide important acoustic cues (e.g., F0, temporal fine structure) for
the interpretation of some stimuli (e.g., speech recognition, music
perception, musical emotion perception), it may actually be
counterproductive for emotional responses to non-speech sounds. That is, the
net effect of contralateral amplification fit to NAL-NL2 targets could
simply be a boost in overall loudness (via a “doubling” of low-frequency
information; acoustic + electric stimulation) that results in a relative
decrease of important high-frequency information (via
the CI). Such a perceptual decrease of high-frequency information could be
at least partly responsible for the reduced emotional responses in the
CI + HA condition as demonstrated here, which would be consistent with the
documented negative effects on emotional responses of increasing overall
stimulus presentation level (Picou, Rakita, et al., 2021) and
reducing high-frequency content (Buono et al., 2021). Future
research is warranted to further examine this relationship in adults using
bimodal stimulation, specifically investigating whether reduced
acoustic-electric overlap across ears and alternative prescriptive fitting
formulae might yield improved emotional responses.
Limitations and Future Directions
There are several limitations worthy of noting. First, the study design did not
explicitly include an evaluation of the device configurations relative to
unaided listening situations. Second, all participants were fit with research
HAs and not all participants had prior experience with this aid or any HA. Goy et al. (2018)
evaluated emotion recognition with participants’ own HAs, in part to ensure they
had experience with the device settings. Unfortunately, some of the participants
in that study were used to amplification that was below prescriptive targets,
especially in the low-frequency region. Thus, future research is warranted to
evaluate the effects of HA use on emotion perception, both recognition and
valence ratings, when the HAs are matched to validated prescriptive targets and
when the participants have had sufficient experience with the settings.Third, group differences in age and gender were evident across the three groups
in this study. Reported differences in gender for valence ratings of the stimuli
used in this study are mixed in the extant literature for these stimuli; some
investigators report no gender effects with the IADS non-speech sounds (Bradley & Lang,
2000) or music (Lundqvist et al., 2009), whereas others report females are more
likely to rate unpleasant non-speech sounds with lower ratings of valence than
males are (Picou &
Buono, 2018). In the current study, the NH group consisted of more
females than did either of the two groups of HI participants. Thus, it is
possible the effects of group membership or PTA in this study might be
attributable to gender differences, but only for unpleasant sounds.The other factor of interest where groups were not matched is age; specifically,
the HA candidate group was, on average, approximately 9 years older than the
other groups. However, this seems unlikely to have affected our results because
differences in ratings of valence related to age have been small and
non-significant with these stimuli (Picou, 2016; Picou & Buono, 2018). Moreover,
aging is generally associated with a positivity effect, where pleasant stimuli
are rated as more pleasant by older adults than by younger ones (Backs et al., 2005;
Grühn & Scheibe,
2008). In the context of the current study, the older group of
participants rated pleasant stimuli as less pleasant than their peers with
better hearing. Thus, it seems unlikely group differences in age contribute to
the reported findings.Fourth, the study stimuli, while all ‘non-speech sounds’ did include music
samples and much of the existing work with non speech sounds are focused on
music. Music and other non-speech sounds might have distinct emotional effects
that warrant further investigation. For example, the results of this study are
inconsistent with existing CI literature where CI users do not demonstrate
ratings of valence relative to listeners with NH in response to music (Ambert-Dahan et al.,
2015). Although exploratory analyses (not reported here) of the
current data set revealed the same pattern of results for the music and
non-music sounds in the study, it seems difficult to draw conclusions about the
distinction in ratings of valence between music and non-music because the
current data set included only 8 music sounds out of 75 total sounds. Thus
future work is warranted to disentangle emotional responses to music from other
non-speech sounds.
Conclusions
Even with assistive hearing devices (HAs and CIs), adults with hearing loss
demonstrate a reduced range of valence ratings in response to non-speech sounds, as
evidenced by less extreme ratings (less pleasant and less unpleasant) than their
similarly aged peers with normal hearing. Those with more significant acoustic
hearing loss were more likely to exhibit less extreme ratings of valence than were
those with better unaided acoustic thresholds. This finding has important
implications for the psychosocial well-being of adults with hearing loss, where
emotional responses to sounds have been linked to isolation and loneliness (Picou & Buono, 2018),
stress recovery (Sandstrom
& Russo, 2010), in addition to focused attention and enhanced memory
(e.g., Kensinger, 2009).
Thus, rehabilitation for adults with hearing loss should consider emotion
perception. Based on the cues that support ratings of valence, it is likely that
interventions that provide auditory access to broadband stimuli would improve
ratings of valence in response to non-speech sounds. Yet, the results of this study
do not provide insight into optimizing device configuration; ratings of valence were
similar with one and two HAs for hearing aid candidates. For bimodal CI listeners,
the conditions with the HA resulted in overall lower ratings of valence and arousal.
These data would suggest CI + HA listening may not be optimal for emotional
responses to non-speech sounds, despite clear advantages in other auditory domains.
Combined, these data support the need for further investigation into hearing device
optimization to improve ratings of valence in response to non-speech sounds for
adults with sensorineural hearing loss.