Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany; Department for General Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience, Institute of Psychology, Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, Jena, Germany.
Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Jena University Hospital, Jena, Germany.
Prog Brain Res. 2021;260:397-422. doi: 10.1016/bs.pbr.2020.12.003. Epub 2021 Jan 19.
While tinnitus is known to compromise the perception of speech, it is unclear if the same holds for extralinguistic speaker information. Furthermore, research with simple tone stimuli showed that unilateral tinnitus binds spatial attention, thereby impeding the detection of auditory changes in the non-affected ear. Using dichotic listening tasks, we tested left-ear tinnitus patients and control patients for their ability to ignore speech and speaker information in the task-irrelevant ear. To this end they heard vowel-consonant-vowel (VCV) syllables simultaneously spoken by gender-ambiguous voices in one ear and male or female voices in the contralateral ear. They selectively attended to speech (Exp. 1) or speaker (Exp. 2) information in a designated target ear, by classifying either the consonant (/b/ or /g/) in VCV syllables or voice gender (male or female) while ignoring distractor voices in the other ear. While performance was comparable across groups in the gender task, tinnitus patients responded slower than controls in the consonant task, with no effect of target ear. This suggests that tinnitus hampers phonetic perception in speech, while preserving the processing of extralinguistic speaker information. These findings support the growing evidence for speech perception impairments in tinnitus.
虽然耳鸣已知会影响言语感知,但尚不清楚其是否同样适用于非语言的说话者信息。此外,使用简单的音调刺激的研究表明,单侧耳鸣会绑定空间注意力,从而阻碍对未受影响耳朵的听觉变化的检测。使用双耳分听任务,我们测试了左耳鸣患者和对照患者在任务无关耳朵中忽略言语和说话者信息的能力。为此,他们同时听到性别模糊的声音在一只耳朵中说出的元音-辅音-元音(VCV)音节,以及在对侧耳朵中说出的男性或女性声音。他们通过在指定的目标耳朵中对语音(实验 1)或说话者(实验 2)信息进行分类,选择性地注意语音或说话者信息,同时忽略另一只耳朵中的干扰声音。虽然两组在性别任务中的表现相当,但耳鸣患者在辅音任务中的反应速度比对照组慢,而目标耳朵没有影响。这表明耳鸣会干扰言语中的语音感知,而不影响非语言的说话者信息处理。这些发现支持越来越多的证据表明耳鸣会导致言语感知障碍。