Stevenson Ryan A, Nelms Caitlin E, Baum Sarah H, Zurkovsky Lilia, Barense Morgan D, Newhouse Paul A, Wallace Mark T
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA; Vanderbilt Brain Institute, Nashville, TN, USA; Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Department of Psychology, Austin Peay State University, Clarksville, TN, USA; Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, USA.
Neurobiol Aging. 2015 Jan;36(1):283-91. doi: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2014.08.003. Epub 2014 Aug 7.
Over the next 2 decades, a dramatic shift in the demographics of society will take place, with a rapid growth in the population of older adults. One of the most common complaints with healthy aging is a decreased ability to successfully perceive speech, particularly in noisy environments. In such noisy environments, the presence of visual speech cues (i.e., lip movements) provide striking benefits for speech perception and comprehension, but previous research suggests that older adults gain less from such audiovisual integration than their younger peers. To determine at what processing level these behavioral differences arise in healthy-aging populations, we administered a speech-in-noise task to younger and older adults. We compared the perceptual benefits of having speech information available in both the auditory and visual modalities and examined both phoneme and whole-word recognition across varying levels of signal-to-noise ratio. For whole-word recognition, older adults relative to younger adults showed greater multisensory gains at intermediate SNRs but reduced benefit at low SNRs. By contrast, at the phoneme level both younger and older adults showed approximately equivalent increases in multisensory gain as signal-to-noise ratio decreased. Collectively, the results provide important insights into both the similarities and differences in how older and younger adults integrate auditory and visual speech cues in noisy environments and help explain some of the conflicting findings in previous studies of multisensory speech perception in healthy aging. These novel findings suggest that audiovisual processing is intact at more elementary levels of speech perception in healthy-aging populations and that deficits begin to emerge only at the more complex word-recognition level of speech signals.
在接下来的20年里,社会人口结构将发生巨大变化,老年人数量迅速增长。健康老龄化过程中最常见的抱怨之一是成功感知语音的能力下降,尤其是在嘈杂环境中。在这种嘈杂环境中,视觉语音线索(即嘴唇动作)的存在对语音感知和理解有显著益处,但先前的研究表明,与年轻同龄人相比,老年人从这种视听整合中获得的益处更少。为了确定这些行为差异在健康老龄化人群中出现在何种处理水平,我们对年轻人和老年人进行了一项噪声环境下的语音任务。我们比较了在听觉和视觉两种模态下获取语音信息的感知益处,并研究了不同信噪比水平下的音素和整词识别。对于整词识别,与年轻人相比,老年人在中等信噪比下表现出更大的多感官增益,但在低信噪比下益处减少。相比之下,在音素水平上,随着信噪比降低,年轻人和老年人的多感官增益增加幅度大致相当。总体而言,这些结果为年轻人和老年人在嘈杂环境中整合听觉和视觉语音线索的异同提供了重要见解,并有助于解释先前健康老龄化多感官语音感知研究中的一些相互矛盾的发现。这些新发现表明,在健康老龄化人群中,视听处理在语音感知的更基本水平上是完整的,缺陷仅在语音信号更复杂的单词识别水平上才开始出现。