Smith Sherri L, Pichora-Fuller M Kathleen, Alexander Genevieve
1Audiologic Rehabilitation Laboratory, Auditory Vestibular Research Enhancement Award Program, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Mountain Home, Tennessee, USA; 2Department of Audiology and Speech Language Pathology, East Tennessee State University, Johnson City, Tennessee, USA; 3Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada; 4Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; 5Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and 6Linneaus Centre HEAD, Linköping University, Sweden.
Ear Hear. 2016 Nov/Dec;37(6):e360-e376. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000329.
The purpose of this study was to develop the Word Auditory Recognition and Recall Measure (WARRM) and to conduct the inaugural evaluation of the performance of younger adults with normal hearing, older adults with normal to near-normal hearing, and older adults with pure-tone hearing loss on the WARRM.
The WARRM is a new test designed for concurrently assessing word recognition and auditory working memory performance in adults who may have pure-tone hearing loss. The test consists of 100 monosyllabic words based on widely used speech-recognition test materials. The 100 words are presented in recall set sizes of 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 items, with 5 trials in each set size. The WARRM yields a word-recognition score and a recall score. The WARRM was administered to all participants in three listener groups under two processing conditions in a mixed model (between-subjects, repeated measures) design. The between-subjects factor was group, with 48 younger listeners with normal audiometric thresholds (younger listeners with normal hearing [YNH]), 48 older listeners with normal thresholds through 3000 Hz (older listeners with normal hearing [ONH]), and 48 older listeners with sensorineural hearing loss (older listeners with hearing loss [OHL]). The within-subjects factor was WARRM processing condition (no additional task or with an alphabet judgment task). The associations between results on the WARRM test and results on a battery of other auditory and memory measures were examined.
Word-recognition performance on the WARRM was not affected by processing condition or set size and was near ceiling for the YNH and ONH listeners (99 and 98%, respectively) with both groups performing significantly better than the OHL listeners (83%). The recall results were significantly better for the YNH, ONH, and OHL groups with no processing (93, 84, and 75%, respectively) than with the alphabet processing (86, 77, and 70%). In both processing conditions, recall was best for YNH, followed by ONH, and worst for OHL listeners. WARRM recall scores were significantly correlated with other memory measures. In addition, WARRM recall scores were correlated with results on the Words-In-Noise (WIN) test for the OHL listeners in the no processing condition and for ONH listeners in the alphabet processing condition. Differences in the WIN and recall scores of these groups are consistent with the interpretation that the OHL listeners found listening to be sufficiently demanding to affect recall even in the no processing condition, whereas the ONH group listeners did not find it so demanding until the additional alphabet processing task was added.
These findings demonstrate the feasibility of incorporating an auditory memory test into a word-recognition test to obtain measures of both word recognition and working memory simultaneously. The correlation of WARRM recall with scores from other memory measures is evidence of construct validity. The observation of correlations between the WIN thresholds with each of the older groups and recall scores in certain processing conditions suggests that recall depends on listeners' word-recognition abilities in noise in combination with the processing demands of the task. The recall score provides additional information beyond the pure-tone audiogram and word-recognition scores that may help rehabilitative audiologists assess the listening abilities of patients with hearing loss.
本研究旨在开发单词听觉识别与回忆测验(WARRM),并对听力正常的年轻人、听力正常至接近正常的老年人以及患有纯音听力损失的老年人在WARRM上的表现进行首次评估。
WARRM是一项新测试,旨在同时评估可能患有纯音听力损失的成年人的单词识别和听觉工作记忆表现。该测试由100个基于广泛使用的言语识别测试材料的单音节词组成。这100个单词以2、3、4、5和6个项目的回忆集大小呈现,每个集大小有5次试验。WARRM产生一个单词识别分数和一个回忆分数。在混合模型(被试间、重复测量)设计的两种处理条件下,将WARRM施测于三个听众组的所有参与者。被试间因素是组,有48名听力阈值正常的年轻听众(听力正常的年轻听众[YNH])、48名3000Hz以下阈值正常的老年听众(听力正常的老年听众[ONH])和48名患有感音神经性听力损失的老年听众(听力损失的老年听众[OHL])。被试内因素是WARRM处理条件(无额外任务或有字母判断任务)。研究了WARRM测试结果与一系列其他听觉和记忆测量结果之间的关联。
WARRM上的单词识别表现不受处理条件或集大小的影响,YNH和ONH听众的表现接近上限(分别为99%和98%),两组的表现均显著优于OHL听众(83%)。在无处理时,YNH、ONH和OHL组的回忆结果(分别为93%、84%和75%)明显优于字母处理时(分别为86%、77%和70%)。在两种处理条件下,YNH的回忆最好,其次是ONH,OHL听众最差。WARRM回忆分数与其他记忆测量显著相关。此外,在无处理条件下,OHL听众的WARRM回忆分数与噪声中的单词(WIN)测试结果相关;在字母处理条件下,ONH听众的WARRM回忆分数与WIN测试结果相关。这些组在WIN和回忆分数上的差异符合以下解释:OHL听众发现即使在无处理条件下,听力要求也足以影响回忆,而ONH组听众直到添加额外的字母处理任务才发现要求如此之高。
这些发现证明了将听觉记忆测试纳入单词识别测试以同时获得单词识别和工作记忆测量的可行性。WARRM回忆与其他记忆测量分数的相关性是结构效度的证据。在某些处理条件下,WIN阈值与每个老年组以及回忆分数之间的相关性观察表明,回忆取决于听众在噪声中的单词识别能力以及任务的处理要求。回忆分数提供了纯音听力图和单词识别分数之外的额外信息,这可能有助于康复听力学家评估听力损失患者的听力能力。