Department of Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology, Towson University, Towson, Maryland, USA.
Specialty Physician Associates, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA.
Ear Hear. 2021 Jan/Feb;42(1):87-105. doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000902.
There is increasing interest in using the frequency following response (FFR) to describe the effects of varying different aspects of hearing aid signal processing on brainstem neural representation of speech. To this end, recent studies have examined the effects of filtering on brainstem neural representation of the speech fundamental frequency (f0) in listeners with normal hearing sensitivity by measuring FFRs to low- and high-pass filtered signals. However, the stimuli used in these studies do not reflect the entire range of typical cutoff frequencies used in frequency-specific gain adjustments during hearing aid fitting. Further, there has been limited discussion on the effect of filtering on brainstem neural representation of formant-related harmonics. Here, the effects of filtering on brainstem neural representation of speech fundamental frequency (f0) and harmonics related to first formant frequency (F1) were assessed by recording envelope and spectral FFRs to a vowel low-, high-, and band-pass filtered at cutoff frequencies ranging from 0.125 to 8 kHz.
FFRs were measured to a synthetically generated vowel stimulus /u/ presented in a full bandwidth and low-pass (experiment 1), high-pass (experiment 2), and band-pass (experiment 3) filtered conditions. In experiment 1, FFRs were measured to a synthetically generated vowel stimulus /u/ presented in a full bandwidth condition as well as 11 low-pass filtered conditions (low-pass cutoff frequencies: 0.125, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, 6, and 8 kHz) in 19 adult listeners with normal hearing sensitivity. In experiment 2, FFRs were measured to the same synthetically generated vowel stimulus /u/ presented in a full bandwidth condition as well as 10 high-pass filtered conditions (high-pass cutoff frequencies: 0.125, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 4, and 6 kHz) in 7 adult listeners with normal hearing sensitivity. In experiment 3, in addition to the full bandwidth condition, FFRs were measured to vowel /u/ low-pass filtered at 2 kHz, band-pass filtered between 2-4 kHz and 4-6 kHz in 10 adult listeners with normal hearing sensitivity. A Fast Fourier Transform analysis was conducted to measure the strength of f0 and the F1-related harmonic relative to the noise floor in the brainstem neural responses obtained to the full bandwidth and filtered stimulus conditions.
Brainstem neural representation of f0 was reduced when the low-pass filter cutoff frequency was between 0.25 and 0.5 kHz; no differences in f0 strength were noted between conditions when the low-pass filter cutoff condition was at or greater than 0.75 kHz. While envelope FFR f0 strength was reduced when the stimulus was high-pass filtered at 6 kHz, there was no effect of high-pass filtering on brainstem neural representation of f0 when the high-pass filter cutoff frequency ranged from 0.125 to 4 kHz. There was a weakly significant global effect of band-pass filtering on brainstem neural phase-locking to f0. A trends analysis indicated that mean f0 magnitude in the brainstem neural response was greater when the stimulus was band-pass filtered between 2 and 4 kHz as compared to when the stimulus was band-pass filtered between 4 and 6 kHz, low-pass filtered at 2 kHz or presented in the full bandwidth condition. Last, neural phase-locking to f0 was reduced or absent in envelope FFRs measured to filtered stimuli that lacked spectral energy above 0.125 kHz or below 6 kHz. Similarly, little to no energy was seen at F1 in spectral FFRs obtained to low-, high-, or band-pass filtered stimuli that did not contain energy in the F1 region. For stimulus conditions that contained energy at F1, the strength of the peak at F1 in the spectral FFR varied little with low-, high-, or band-pass filtering.
Energy at f0 in envelope FFRs may arise due to neural phase-locking to low-, mid-, or high-frequency stimulus components, provided the stimulus envelope is modulated by at least two interacting harmonics. Stronger neural responses at f0 are measured when filtering results in stimulus bandwidths that preserve stimulus energy at F1 and F2. In addition, results suggest that unresolved harmonics may favorably influence f0 strength in the neural response. Lastly, brainstem neural representation of the F1-related harmonic measured in spectral FFRs obtained to filtered stimuli is related to the presence or absence of stimulus energy at F1. These findings add to the existing literature exploring the viability of the FFR as an objective technique to evaluate hearing aid fitting where stimulus bandwidth is altered by design due to frequency-specific gain applied by amplification algorithms.
人们越来越感兴趣的是使用频率跟随反应(FFR)来描述不同方面的助听器信号处理对脑干神经对言语的基本频率(f0)的影响。为此,最近的研究通过测量低通和高通滤波信号的 FFR,检查了正常听力敏感性的听众中脑干神经对言语基频(f0)的滤波对大脑的影响。然而,这些研究中使用的刺激并不能反映助听器适配过程中频率特异性增益调整中使用的典型截止频率的全部范围。此外,对于滤波对第一共振峰频率(F1)相关谐波的脑干神经表示的影响,讨论也很有限。在这里,通过记录包络和频谱 FFR,评估了滤波对言语基频(f0)和与第一共振峰频率(F1)相关的谐波的脑干神经表示的影响,截止频率范围为 0.125 至 8 kHz 的低通、高通和带通滤波。
实验 1 中,通过测量合成元音/u/在全带宽和低通(实验 1)、高通(实验 2)和带通(实验 3)滤波条件下的 FFR,评估了 FFR 对言语基频(f0)的影响。在实验 1 中,测量了 19 名正常听力敏感性的成年受试者在全带宽条件下以及 11 种低通滤波条件(低通截止频率:0.125、0.25、0.5、0.75、1、1.5、2、3、4、6 和 8 kHz)下合成元音/u/的 FFR。在实验 2 中,在全带宽条件下以及 7 名正常听力敏感性的成年受试者的 10 种高通滤波条件(高通截止频率:0.125、0.25、0.5、0.75、1、1.5、2、3、4 和 6 kHz)下测量了相同的合成元音/u/的 FFR。在实验 3 中,除了全带宽条件外,还在 10 名正常听力敏感性的成年受试者中测量了低频截止频率为 2 kHz 的低通滤波和 2-4 kHz 和 4-6 kHz 之间的带通滤波的元音/u 的 FFR。在获得的全带宽和滤波刺激条件下的脑干神经反应中,通过快速傅里叶变换分析测量了 f0 和 F1 相关谐波相对于噪声基底的强度。
当低通滤波器截止频率在 0.25 和 0.5 kHz 之间时,f0 的脑干神经表示减少;当低通滤波器截止频率为 0.75 kHz 或更高时,条件之间的 f0 强度没有差异。当刺激以 6 kHz 高通滤波时,包络 FFR 的 f0 强度降低,但当高通滤波器截止频率在 0.125 至 4 kHz 之间时,f0 的脑干神经表示不受影响。带通滤波对 f0 的脑干神经相位锁定有微弱的全局影响。趋势分析表明,当刺激在 2-4 kHz 之间带通滤波时,脑干神经反应中的 f0 幅度大于当刺激在 4-6 kHz 之间带通滤波时,或者当刺激在 2 kHz 时低通滤波或处于全带宽条件时。最后,当刺激缺乏 0.125 kHz 以上或 6 kHz 以下的频谱能量时,过滤刺激的包络 FFR 中 f0 的神经锁相减少或不存在。同样,在低频、高频或带通滤波的刺激中,在没有包含 F1 区域能量的情况下,在频谱 FFR 中几乎没有能量出现在 F1 处。对于包含 F1 处能量的刺激条件,频谱 FFR 中 F1 处的峰值强度与低频、高频或带通滤波的变化不大。
包络 FFR 中的 f0 能量可能是由于神经对低频、中频或高频刺激成分的相位锁定产生的,前提是刺激包络由至少两个相互作用的谐波调制。当滤波导致刺激带宽保留 F1 和 F2 处的刺激能量时,会测量到更强的 f0 神经反应。此外,结果表明,未解决的谐波可能会有利地影响神经反应中的 f0 强度。最后,在从过滤刺激获得的频谱 FFR 中测量的与第一共振峰频率(F1)相关的谐波的脑干神经表示与 F1 处的刺激能量的存在或不存在有关。这些发现增加了现有的文献,探索了 FFR 作为一种客观技术的可行性,用于评估由于放大算法应用的频率特异性增益而改变刺激带宽的助听器适配。