Sidiras Christos, Iliadou Vasiliki Vivian, Nimatoudis Ioannis, Bamiou Doris-Eva
Clinical Psychoacoustics Lab, 3rd Department of Psychiatry, Neuroscience Sector, Medical School, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Faculty of Brain Sciences, UCL Ear Institute, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Neurosci. 2020 May 5;14:418. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2020.00418. eCollection 2020.
Auditory processing disorder (APD) is a specific deficit in the processing of auditory information along the central auditory nervous system. It is characterized mainly by deficits in speech in noise recognition. APD children may also present with deficits in processing of auditory rhythm. Rhythmic neural entrainment is commonly present in perception of both speech and music, while auditory rhythmic priming of speech in noise has been known to enhance recognition in typical children. Here, we test the hypothesis that the effect of rhythmic priming is compromised in APD children, and further assessed for correlations with verbal and non-verbal auditory processing and cognition. Forty APD children and 33 neurotypical ones were assessed through (a) WRRC, a test measuring the effects of rhythmic priming on speech in noise recognition, (b) a battery of auditory processing tests, commonly used in APD diagnosis, and (c) two cognitive tests, assessing working memory and auditory attention respectively. Findings revealed that (a) the effect of rhythmic priming on speech in noise recognition is absent in APD children, (b) it is linked to non-verbal auditory processing, and (c) it is only weakly dependent on cognition. We discuss these findings in light of Dynamic Attention Theory, neural entrainment and neural oscillations and suggest that these functions may be compromised in APD children. Further research is needed (a) to explore the nature of the mechanics of rhythmic priming on speech in noise perception and why the effect is absent in APD children, (b) which other mechanisms related to both rhythm and language are also affected in this population, and (c) whether music/rhythm training can restore deficits in rhythm effects.
听觉处理障碍(APD)是指沿中枢听觉神经系统处理听觉信息时出现的特定缺陷。其主要特征是在噪声环境中语音识别能力不足。患有APD的儿童在听觉节奏处理方面也可能存在缺陷。节奏性神经夹带现象在语音和音乐感知中普遍存在,而噪声环境中语音的听觉节奏启动已知可增强正常儿童的识别能力。在此,我们检验了这样一个假设:节奏启动效应在患有APD的儿童中受损,并进一步评估其与言语和非言语听觉处理及认知的相关性。通过以下方式对40名患有APD的儿童和33名神经发育正常的儿童进行了评估:(a)WRRC,一项测量节奏启动对噪声环境中语音识别影响的测试;(b)一系列常用于APD诊断的听觉处理测试;(c)两项认知测试,分别评估工作记忆和听觉注意力。研究结果显示:(a)患有APD的儿童不存在节奏启动对噪声环境中语音识别的影响;(b)该影响与非言语听觉处理有关;(c)它仅微弱地依赖于认知。我们根据动态注意理论、神经夹带和神经振荡来讨论这些发现,并表明这些功能在患有APD的儿童中可能受损。需要进一步开展研究:(a)探索节奏启动对噪声环境中语音感知的作用机制的本质,以及为何患有APD的儿童不存在这种效应;(b)该人群中与节奏和语言相关的其他哪些机制也受到影响;(c)音乐/节奏训练是否能够恢复节奏效应方面的缺陷。