Perron Maxime, Dimitrijevic Andrew, Alain Claude
Department of Psychology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Academy for Research and Education, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Trends Hear. 2025 Jan-Dec;29:23312165251375891. doi: 10.1177/23312165251375891. Epub 2025 Sep 5.
Understanding speech in noise is a common challenge for older adults, often requiring increased listening effort that can deplete cognitive resources and impair higher-order functions. Hearing aids are the gold standard intervention for hearing loss, but cost and accessibility barriers have driven interest in alternatives such as Personal Sound Amplification Products (PSAPs). While PSAPs are not medical devices, they may help reduce listening effort in certain contexts, though supporting evidence remains limited. This study examined the short-term effects of bilateral PSAP use on listening effort using self-report measures and electroencephalography (EEG) recordings of alpha-band activity (8-12 Hz) in older adults with and without hearing loss. Twenty-five participants aged 60 to 87 years completed a hearing assessment and a phonological discrimination task under three signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) conditions during two counterbalanced sessions (unaided and aided). Results showed that PSAPs significantly reduced self-reported effort. Alpha activity in the left parietotemporal regions showed event-related desynchronization (ERD) during the task, reflecting brain engagement in response to speech in noise. In the unaided condition, alpha ERD weakened as SNR decreased, with activity approaching baseline. PSAP use moderated this effect, maintaining stronger ERD under the most challenging SNR condition. Reduced alpha ERD was associated with greater self-reported effort, suggesting neural and subjective measures reflect related dimensions of listening demand. These results suggest that even brief PSAP use can reduce perceived and neural markers of listening effort. While not a replacement for hearing aids, PSAPs may offer a means for easing cognitive load during effortful listening. ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05076045, https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05076045.
理解噪声环境中的言语对老年人来说是一项常见挑战,通常需要增加听力努力,这可能会耗尽认知资源并损害高阶功能。助听器是听力损失的金标准干预措施,但成本和可及性障碍促使人们对个人声音放大产品(PSAP)等替代方案产生兴趣。虽然PSAP不是医疗设备,但它们可能有助于在某些情况下减少听力努力,不过支持证据仍然有限。本研究使用自我报告测量和脑电图(EEG)记录的α波段活动(8-12Hz),研究了双侧使用PSAP对有听力损失和无听力损失的老年人听力努力的短期影响。25名年龄在60至87岁之间的参与者在两个平衡的阶段(未佩戴辅助设备和佩戴辅助设备)中,在三种信噪比(SNR)条件下完成了听力评估和语音辨别任务。结果表明,PSAP显著降低了自我报告的努力程度。在任务期间,左顶颞区域的α活动显示出事件相关去同步化(ERD),反映了大脑对噪声中言语的反应参与度。在未佩戴辅助设备的情况下,随着SNR降低,α ERD减弱,活动接近基线。使用PSAP调节了这种效应,在最具挑战性的SNR条件下保持了更强的ERD。α ERD降低与更高的自我报告努力程度相关,表明神经和主观测量反映了听力需求的相关维度。这些结果表明,即使短暂使用PSAP也可以减少听力努力的感知和神经指标。虽然不能替代助听器,但PSAP可能提供一种在费力聆听期间减轻认知负荷的方法。ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT05076045,https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05076045。