Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, 20742, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2022 Dec;23(6):771-786. doi: 10.1007/s10162-022-00859-x. Epub 2022 Aug 10.
The ability to understand speech in complex environments depends on the brain's ability to preserve the precise timing characteristics of the speech signal. Age-related declines in temporal processing may contribute to the older adult's experience of communication difficulty in challenging listening conditions. This study's purpose was to evaluate the effects of rate discrimination training on auditory temporal processing. A double-blind, randomized control design assigned 77 young normal-hearing, older normal-hearing, and older hearing-impaired listeners to one of two treatment groups: experimental (rate discrimination for 100- and 300-Hz pulse trains) and active control (tone detection in noise). All listeners were evaluated during pre- and post-training sessions using perceptual rate discrimination of 100-, 200-, 300-, and 400-Hz band-limited pulse trains and auditory steady-state responses (ASSRs) to the same stimuli. Training generalization was evaluated using several temporal processing measures and sentence recognition tests that included time-compressed and reverberant speech stimuli. Results demonstrated a session × training group interaction for perceptual and ASSR testing to the trained frequencies (100 and 300 Hz), driven by greater improvements in the training group than in the active control group. Further, post-test rate discrimination of the older listeners reached levels that were equivalent to those of the younger listeners at pre-test. Generalization was observed in significant improvement in rate discrimination of untrained frequencies (200 and 400 Hz) and in correlations between performance changes in rate discrimination and sentence recognition of reverberant speech. Further, non-auditory inhibition/attention performance predicted training-related improvement in rate discrimination. Overall, the results demonstrate the potential for auditory training to partially restore temporal processing in older listeners and highlight the role of cognitive function in these gains.
在复杂环境中理解言语的能力取决于大脑保留言语信号精确时间特征的能力。与年龄相关的时间处理能力下降可能是导致老年患者在具有挑战性的聆听环境中感到交流困难的原因之一。本研究旨在评估速率辨别训练对听觉时间处理的影响。采用双盲、随机对照设计,将 77 名年轻正常听力者、老年正常听力者和老年听力障碍者分配到两个治疗组之一:实验组(100 和 300 Hz 脉冲序列的速率辨别)和主动对照组(噪声中的音调检测)。所有听力者在训练前和训练后评估中,使用感知率辨别 100、200、300 和 400 Hz 带限脉冲序列以及相同刺激的听觉稳态反应(ASSR)进行评估。使用几种时间处理测量和包括时间压缩和混响语音刺激的句子识别测试来评估训练泛化。结果表明,感知和 ASSR 测试到训练频率(100 和 300 Hz)的会话 × 训练组交互作用,实验组的改善大于主动对照组。此外,老年听力者的后期测试率辨别能力达到了与年轻听力者在前期测试相同的水平。在未训练频率(200 和 400 Hz)的率辨别能力显著提高以及在混响语音的句子识别中表现变化之间的相关性方面观察到了泛化。此外,非听觉抑制/注意力表现预测了与训练相关的率辨别能力的提高。总的来说,结果表明听觉训练有可能部分恢复老年听力者的时间处理能力,并强调认知功能在这些收益中的作用。