Zinchenko Artyom, Kanske Philipp, Obermeier Christian, Schröger Erich, Villringer Arno, Kotz Sonja A
International Max Planck Research School on Neuroscience of Communication (IMPRS NeuroCom), Leipzig, Germany.
Department of Neuropsychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, Germany.
Front Neurol. 2018 Sep 19;9:783. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00783. eCollection 2018.
Progressive hearing loss is a common phenomenon in healthy aging and may affect the perception of emotions expressed in speech. Elderly with mild to moderate hearing loss often rate emotional expressions as less emotional and display reduced activity in emotion-sensitive brain areas (e.g., amygdala). However, it is not clear how hearing loss affects cognitive and emotional control mechanisms engaged in multimodal speech processing. In previous work we showed that negative, task-relevant and -irrelevant emotion modulates the two types of control in younger and older adults without hearing loss. To further explore how reduced hearing capacity affects emotional and cognitive control, we tested whether moderate hearing loss (>30 dB) at frequencies relevant for speech impacts cognitive and emotional control. We tested two groups of older adults with hearing loss (HL; = 21; mean age = 70.5) and without hearing loss (NH; = 21; mean age = 68.4). In two EEG experiments participants observed multimodal video clips and either categorized pronounced vowels (cognitive conflict) or their emotions (emotional conflict). Importantly, the facial expressions were either matched or mismatched with the corresponding vocalizations. In both conflict tasks, we found that negative stimuli modulated behavioral conflict processing in the NH but not the HL group, while the HL group performed at chance level in the emotional conflict task. Further, we found that the amplitude difference between congruent and incongruent stimuli was larger in negative relative to neutral N100 responses across tasks and groups. Lastly, in the emotional conflict task, neutral stimuli elicited a smaller N200 response than emotional stimuli primarily in the HL group. Consequently, age-related hearing loss not only affects the processing of emotional acoustic cues but also alters the behavioral benefits of emotional stimuli on cognitive and emotional control, despite preserved early neural responses. The resulting difficulties in the multimodal integration of incongruent emotional stimuli may lead to problems in processing complex social information (irony, sarcasm) and impact emotion processing in the limbic network. This could be related to social isolation and depression observed in the elderly with age-related hearing loss.
渐进性听力损失是健康衰老过程中的常见现象,可能会影响对言语中所表达情感的感知。轻度至中度听力损失的老年人常常将情感表达评为情感程度较低,并在情感敏感的脑区(如杏仁核)表现出活动减少。然而,目前尚不清楚听力损失如何影响参与多模态言语处理的认知和情感控制机制。在之前的研究中,我们发现,消极的、与任务相关和无关的情绪会调节听力正常的年轻人和老年人的两种控制类型。为了进一步探究听力能力下降如何影响情绪和认知控制,我们测试了与言语相关频率的中度听力损失(>30分贝)是否会影响认知和情绪控制。我们测试了两组老年人,一组有听力损失(HL;n = 21;平均年龄 = 70.5岁),另一组没有听力损失(NH;n = 21;平均年龄 = 68.4岁)。在两项脑电图实验中,参与者观看多模态视频片段,要么对发出的元音进行分类(认知冲突),要么对其情绪进行分类(情感冲突)。重要的是,面部表情与相应的发声要么匹配,要么不匹配。在两项冲突任务中,我们发现消极刺激调节了NH组而非HL组的行为冲突处理,而HL组在情感冲突任务中的表现处于随机水平。此外,我们发现,在各项任务和各组中,与中性刺激相比,消极刺激在一致性和不一致性刺激之间的振幅差异在N100反应中更大。最后,在情感冲突任务中,主要在HL组中,中性刺激引发的N200反应比情感刺激小。因此,与年龄相关的听力损失不仅会影响情感声学线索的处理,还会改变情感刺激对认知和情绪控制的行为益处,尽管早期神经反应得以保留。在整合不一致的情感刺激时出现的多模态困难可能会导致处理复杂社会信息(反讽、讽刺)时出现问题,并影响边缘系统网络中的情绪处理。这可能与在与年龄相关的听力损失的老年人中观察到的社会隔离和抑郁有关。