Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis.
Otol Neurotol. 2023 Sep 1;44(8):e613-e620. doi: 10.1097/MAO.0000000000003966. Epub 2023 Jul 25.
Verbal working memory delays are found in many deaf children with cochlear implants compared with normal-hearing peers, but the factors contributing to these delays are not well understood. This study investigated differences between cochlear implant users and normal-hearing peers in memory scanning speed during a challenging verbal working memory task. To better understand variability in verbal working memory capacity within each sample, associations between memory scanning speed, speech recognition, and language were also investigated.
Twenty-five prelingually deaf, early implanted children (age, 8-17 yr) with cochlear implants and 25 normal-hearing peers completed the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Fifth Edition, Letter-Number Sequencing (LNS) working memory task. Timing measures were made for response latency and average pause duration between letters/numbers recalled during the task. Participants also completed measures of speech recognition, vocabulary, and language comprehension.
Children with cochlear implants had longer pause durations than normal-hearing peers during three-span LNS sequences, but the groups did not differ in response latencies or in pause durations during two-span LNS sequences. In the sample of cochlear implant users, poorer speech recognition was correlated with longer pause durations during two-span sequences, whereas poorer vocabulary and weaker language comprehension were correlated with longer response latencies during two-span sequences. Response latencies and pause durations were unrelated to language in the normal-hearing sample.
Children with cochlear implants have slower verbal working memory scanning speed than children with normal hearing. More robust phonological-lexical representations of language in memory may facilitate faster memory scanning speed and better working memory in cochlear implant users.
与正常听力的同龄人相比,许多使用人工耳蜗的聋童在言语工作记忆延迟方面表现出差异,但导致这些差异的因素尚未得到很好的理解。本研究调查了在一项具有挑战性的言语工作记忆任务中,人工耳蜗使用者与正常听力者之间在记忆扫描速度方面的差异。为了更好地理解每个样本中言语工作记忆能力的可变性,还研究了记忆扫描速度、语音识别和语言之间的相关性。
25 名患有先天性耳聋、早期植入人工耳蜗的儿童(年龄 8-17 岁)和 25 名正常听力的同龄人完成了韦氏儿童智力量表第五版字母-数字排序(LNS)工作记忆任务。对任务中回忆字母/数字之间的反应潜伏期和平均停顿时间进行了计时测量。参与者还完成了语音识别、词汇和语言理解的测量。
在三音 LNS 序列中,人工耳蜗使用者的停顿时间长于正常听力者,但在双音 LNS 序列中,两组在反应潜伏期和停顿时间方面没有差异。在人工耳蜗使用者样本中,较差的语音识别与双音序列中较长的停顿时间相关,而较差的词汇和较弱的语言理解与双音序列中较长的反应潜伏期相关。在正常听力样本中,反应潜伏期和停顿时间与语言无关。
与正常听力儿童相比,使用人工耳蜗的儿童言语工作记忆扫描速度较慢。记忆中更强大的语音-词汇语言表征可能有助于人工耳蜗使用者更快的记忆扫描速度和更好的工作记忆。