Bentler Ruth, Walker Elizabeth, McCreery Ryan, Arenas Richard M, Roush Patricia
1Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA; 2Boys Town National Research Hospital, Omaha, Nebraska, USA; and 3Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Ear Hear. 2014 Jul-Aug;35(4):e143-52. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000030.
The research questions of this study were: (1) Are children using nonlinear frequency compression (NLFC) in their hearing aids getting better access to the speech signal than children using conventional processing schemes? The authors hypothesized that children whose hearing aids provided wider input bandwidth would have more access to the speech signal, as measured by an adaptation of the Speech Intelligibility Index, and (2) are speech and language skills different for children who have been fit with the two different technologies; if so, in what areas? The authors hypothesized that if the children were getting increased access to the speech signal as a result of their NLFC hearing aids (question 1), it would be possible to see improved performance in areas of speech production, morphosyntax, and speech perception compared with the group with conventional processing.
Participants included 66 children with hearing loss recruited as part of a larger multisite National Institutes of Health-funded study, Outcomes for Children with Hearing Loss, designed to explore the developmental outcomes of children with mild to severe hearing loss. For the larger study, data on communication, academic and psychosocial skills were gathered in an accelerated longitudinal design, with entry into the study between 6 months and 7 years of age. Subjects in this report consisted of 3-, 4-, and 5-year-old children recruited at the North Carolina test site. All had at least at least 6 months of current hearing aid usage with their NLFC or conventional amplification. Demographic characteristics were compared at the three age levels as well as audibility and speech/language outcomes; speech-perception scores were compared for the 5-year-old groups.
Results indicate that the audibility provided did not differ between the technology options. As a result, there was no difference between groups on speech or language outcome measures at 4 or 5 years of age, and no impact on speech perception (measured at 5 years of age). The difference in Comprehensive Assessment of Spoken Language and mean length of utterance scores for the 3-year-old group favoring the group with conventional amplification may be a consequence of confounding factors such as increased incidence of prematurity in the group using NLFC.
Children fit with NLFC had similar audibility, as measured by a modified Speech Intelligibility Index, compared with a matched group of children using conventional technology. In turn, there were no differences in their speech and language abilities.
本研究的研究问题为:(1)与使用传统处理方案的儿童相比,使用非线性频率压缩(NLFC)助听器的儿童是否能更好地获取言语信号?作者假设,通过调整言语可懂度指数来衡量,助听器提供更宽输入带宽的儿童能更多地获取言语信号;(2)使用这两种不同技术的儿童在言语和语言技能方面是否存在差异;如果存在差异,具体体现在哪些方面?作者假设,如果儿童因使用NLFC助听器而能更多地获取言语信号(问题1),那么与使用传统处理的组相比,在言语产生、形态句法和言语感知方面可能会有更好的表现。
参与者包括66名听力损失儿童,他们是作为美国国立卫生研究院资助的一项更大规模多中心研究“听力损失儿童的结局”的一部分招募的,该研究旨在探索轻至重度听力损失儿童的发育结局。对于这项更大规模的研究,采用加速纵向设计收集了关于沟通、学业和心理社会技能的数据,研究对象在6个月至7岁之间进入研究。本报告中的受试者包括在北卡罗来纳测试地点招募的3岁、4岁和5岁儿童。所有儿童目前使用NLFC或传统放大助听器至少6个月。比较了三个年龄组的人口统计学特征以及可听度和言语/语言结局;对5岁组的言语感知分数进行了比较。
结果表明,两种技术方案所提供的可听度没有差异。因此,4岁或5岁组在言语或语言结局指标上两组之间没有差异,对言语感知(5岁时测量)也没有影响。3岁组在言语综合评估和平均语句长度分数上有利于使用传统放大的组,这一差异可能是由于使用NLFC组中早产发生率增加等混杂因素导致的。
与一组匹配的使用传统技术的儿童相比,使用NLFC的儿童通过调整后的言语可懂度指数测量的可听度相似。相应地,他们的言语和语言能力没有差异。