Department of Psychology, Ryerson University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Ear Hear. 2012 Mar-Apr;33(2):177-86. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0b013e318233acee.
This study was designed to examine whether age-related differences in melodic pitch perception may be mediated by temporal processing. Temporal models of pitch suggest that performance will decline as the lowest component of a complex tone increases in frequency, regardless of age. In addition, if there are age-related deficits in temporal processing in older adults, this group may have reduced performance relative to younger adults even in the most favorable conditions.
Six younger adults and 10 older adults with clinically normal audiograms up to 8 kHz were tested in a melodic pitch perception task. In each trial, two consecutive four-note melodies were presented to the listener. Melodies were identical with the exception of one note in the second melody that was shifted in pitch. The listener was required to identify which note was shifted. All notes consisted of eight successive harmonic components, with the average lowest component manipulated to be the 4th, 8th, or 12th component of the harmonic series, with lower components being absent.
Age-related differences in melodic pitch perception were only apparent when stimulus parameters favored temporal processing of pitch. Furthermore, modeling a loss of periodicity coding yielded an outcome consistent with the observed behavioral results. Although younger adults generally outperformed older adults, about one-quarter of the older adults performed at levels that were equivalent to those of younger adults. The only follow-up tests that were able to differentiate these exceptional older adults were tests that would be sensitive to temporal processing: fundamental frequency difference limens and 500 Hz pure-tone difference limens. In contrast, otoacoustic emissions and high-frequency pure-tone thresholds, which are more commonly associated with spectral processing deficits, were not able to differentiate older exceptional adults from older typical adults.
Age-related declines in temporal processing contribute to deficits in melodic pitch perception. However, some exceptional older adults with normal audiograms preserve excellent temporal processing and continue to perform at levels that are typical of younger adults.
本研究旨在探讨年龄相关的旋律音高感知差异是否可能与时间处理有关。音高的时间模型表明,无论年龄如何,随着复合音的最低成分频率增加,性能都会下降。此外,如果老年人的时间处理存在与年龄相关的缺陷,那么与年轻人相比,即使在最有利的条件下,他们的表现也可能会降低。
6 名年轻成年人和 10 名年龄在 8 kHz 以下临床听力正常的老年人在旋律音高感知任务中接受测试。在每个试验中,向听众呈现两个连续的四音符旋律。旋律完全相同,只是第二个旋律中的一个音符音高发生了变化。听众需要识别哪个音符发生了变化。所有音符都由连续的八个谐波分量组成,平均最低分量被操纵为谐波系列的第 4、8 或 12 个分量,没有较低的分量。
只有当刺激参数有利于音高的时间处理时,才会出现与年龄相关的旋律音高感知差异。此外,对周期性编码的损失进行建模,得出的结果与观察到的行为结果一致。虽然年轻成年人的表现通常优于老年人,但大约四分之一的老年人的表现与年轻人相当。唯一能够区分这些特殊老年人的后续测试是对时间处理敏感的测试:基频差限和 500 Hz 纯音差限。相比之下,耳声发射和高频纯音阈值不能区分特殊老年人和典型老年人,而这些测试通常与频谱处理缺陷有关。
与年龄相关的时间处理能力下降导致旋律音高感知缺陷。然而,一些听力正常的特殊老年人保留了出色的时间处理能力,继续表现出与年轻人相当的水平。