O'Beirne Greg A, McGaffin Andrew J, Rickard Natalie A
Department of Communication Disorders, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2012 Jun;76(6):777-82. doi: 10.1016/j.ijporl.2012.02.039. Epub 2012 Mar 7.
One type of test commonly used to examine auditory processing disorders (APD) is the low-pass filtered speech test (LPFST), of which there are various versions. In LPFSTs, a monaural, low-redundancy speech sample is distorted by using filtering to modify its frequency content. Due to the richness of the neural pathways in the auditory system and the redundancy of acoustic information in spoken language, a normal listener is able to recognize speech even when parts of the signal are missing, whereas this ability is often impaired in listeners with APD. One limitation of the various versions of the LPFST is that they are carried out using a constant level of low-pass filtering (e.g. a fixed 1kHz corner frequency) which makes them prone to ceiling and floor effects. The purpose of this study was to counter these effects by modifying the LPFST using a computer-based adaptive procedure, and to evaluate the performance of normal-hearing participants of varying ages on the test.
In this preliminary study, 33 adults and 30 children (aged 8-11 years) with no known history of listening difficulties were tested. The University of Canterbury Adaptive Speech Test (UCAST) platform was used to administer a four-alternative forced-choice adaptive test that altered a low-pass filter (LPF) to track the corner frequency at which participants correctly identified a certain percentage of the word stimuli.
Findings on the University of Canterbury Adaptive Speech Test-Filtered Words (UCAST-FW) indicated a significant maturational effect. Adult participants performed significantly better on the UCAST-FW in comparison to the child participants. The UCAST-FW test was reliable over repeated administrations.
An adaptive low-pass filtered speech test such as the UCAST-FW is sensitive to maturational changes in auditory processing ability.
常用于检测听觉加工障碍(APD)的一种测试类型是低通滤波言语测试(LPFST),它有多种版本。在低通滤波言语测试中,通过滤波改变其频率成分来使单耳、低冗余度的言语样本产生失真。由于听觉系统中神经通路丰富,以及口语中声学信息具有冗余性,正常听力的听者即便信号部分缺失也能够识别言语,而有听觉加工障碍的听者这一能力常常受损。低通滤波言语测试的各个版本存在的一个局限性在于,它们是使用恒定水平的低通滤波(例如固定的1kHz截止频率)来进行的,这使得它们容易出现天花板效应和地板效应。本研究的目的是通过使用基于计算机的自适应程序对低通滤波言语测试进行修改来应对这些效应,并评估不同年龄的听力正常参与者在该测试中的表现。
在这项初步研究中,对33名无已知听力困难病史的成年人以及30名儿童(8至11岁)进行了测试。使用坎特伯雷大学自适应言语测试(UCAST)平台来实施一项四选一强制选择自适应测试,该测试改变低通滤波器(LPF)以追踪参与者能够正确识别一定比例单词刺激的截止频率。
坎特伯雷大学自适应言语测试-滤波单词(UCAST-FW)的结果显示出显著的成熟效应。与儿童参与者相比,成年参与者在UCAST-FW测试中的表现明显更好。UCAST-FW测试在重复施测时具有可靠性。
诸如UCAST-FW这样的自适应低通滤波言语测试对听觉加工能力的成熟变化敏感。