Ward Caitlin M, Rogers Chad S, Van Engen Kristin J, Peelle Jonathan E
a Department of Otolaryngology , Washington University in St. Louis , St. Louis , Missouri , USA.
b Department of Psychology , Washington University in St. Louis , St. Louis , Missouri , USA.
Exp Aging Res. 2016;42(1):97-111. doi: 10.1080/0361073X.2016.1108785.
BACKGROUND/STUDY CONTEXT: A common goal during speech comprehension is to remember what we have heard. Encoding speech into long-term memory frequently requires processes such as verbal working memory that may also be involved in processing degraded speech. Here the authors tested whether young and older adult listeners' memory for short stories was worse when the stories were acoustically degraded, or whether the additional contextual support provided by a narrative would protect against these effects.
The authors tested 30 young adults (aged 18-28 years) and 30 older adults (aged 65-79 years) with good self-reported hearing. Participants heard short stories that were presented as normal (unprocessed) speech or acoustically degraded using a noise vocoding algorithm with 24 or 16 channels. The degraded stories were still fully intelligible. Following each story, participants were asked to repeat the story in as much detail as possible. Recall was scored using a modified idea unit scoring approach, which included separately scoring hierarchical levels of narrative detail.
Memory for acoustically degraded stories was significantly worse than for normal stories at some levels of narrative detail. Older adults' memory for the stories was significantly worse overall, but there was no interaction between age and acoustic clarity or level of narrative detail. Verbal working memory (assessed by reading span) significantly correlated with recall accuracy for both young and older adults, whereas hearing ability (better ear pure tone average) did not.
The present findings are consistent with a framework in which the additional cognitive demands caused by a degraded acoustic signal use resources that would otherwise be available for memory encoding for both young and older adults. Verbal working memory is a likely candidate for supporting both of these processes.
背景/研究背景:言语理解过程中的一个常见目标是记住我们所听到的内容。将言语编码到长期记忆中通常需要诸如言语工作记忆等过程,这些过程也可能参与处理 degraded speech(此处未明确degraded speech的准确中文术语,可暂译为“ degraded speech”)。在此,作者测试了年轻和年长成年听众对短篇小说的记忆在故事声学质量下降时是否更差,或者叙事提供的额外语境支持是否能抵御这些影响。
作者测试了30名自我报告听力良好的年轻成年人(年龄在18 - 28岁之间)和30名年长成年人(年龄在65 - 79岁之间)。参与者听取以正常(未处理)言语呈现的短篇小说,或者使用具有24或16个通道的噪声声码算法进行声学质量下降处理后的小说。这些质量下降的故事仍然完全可理解。听完每个故事后,要求参与者尽可能详细地复述故事。回忆的评分采用改进的观念单元评分方法,该方法包括分别对叙事细节的层次水平进行评分。
在某些叙事细节水平上,对声学质量下降故事的记忆明显比对正常故事的记忆差。年长成年人对故事的总体记忆明显更差,但年龄与声学清晰度或叙事细节水平之间没有相互作用。言语工作记忆(通过阅读广度评估)与年轻和年长成年人的回忆准确性均显著相关,而听力能力(较好耳纯音平均听阈)则不然。
目前的研究结果与这样一个框架一致,即声学信号质量下降所带来的额外认知需求会消耗原本可用于年轻和年长成年人记忆编码的资源。言语工作记忆很可能是支持这两个过程的一个因素。