Remediation of Spatial Processing Deficits in Hearing-Impaired Children and Adults

被引:8
|
作者
Glyde, Helen [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Cameron, Sharon [1 ,2 ]
Dillon, Harvey [1 ,2 ]
Hickson, Louise [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Dept Audiol Hearing & Speech Sci, HEARing Cooperat Res Ctr, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia
[2] Natl Acoust Labs, Macquarie Pk, Australia
[3] Univ Queensland, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia
关键词
Spatial processing; spatial release from masking; hearing impairment; auditory training; LiSN & Learn; SPEECH; NOISE; BENEFIT; LISN; SEPARATION;
D O I
10.3766/jaaa.25.6.5
中图分类号
R36 [病理学]; R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100104 ; 100213 ;
摘要
Background: The ability to use interaural cues to segregate target speech from competing signals allows people with normal hearing to understand speech at significantly poorer signal-to-noise ratio's. This ability, referred to as spatial processing ability or spatial release from masking, has been shown to be deficient in people with a sensorineural hearing loss even after amplification is applied. Spatial processing deficits in a population of children with auditory processing deficits have been found to be remediable through the use of a deficit-specific auditory training program called the LiSN & Learn. Purpose: The aim of the present study was to determine whether LiSN & Learn auditory training could improve the spatial processing ability of hearing-impaired adults and children. In addition, the research investigated whether the age of the participant would affect the efficacy of the training program. Research Design: In a repeated-measures design, participants' spatial processing ability was assessed pretraining and posttraining using the Listening in Spatialized Noise-Sentences Test (LiSN-S). Questionnaire responses were also collected from participants pretraining and posttraining to provide a subjective measure of real-life listening difficulty. Between the two assessment periods, participants were asked to train with the LiSN & Learn for 15 min per day, 5 days per week for 60 training sessions. Study Sample: Participants were five children (aged 6-11 yr) and five adults (aged 60-74 yr) with up to a moderate sensorineural hearing loss. Data Collection and Analysis: The LiSN & Learn auditory training software incorporates five computer games in which target sentences, processed with head-related transfer functions, are perceived as coming from 0 azimuth, and simultaneous distracting speech streams are perceived as coming from +/- 90 degrees azimuth. Participants are tasked with identifying a word from the target sentence and selecting the corresponding picture from a selection of four images displayed on the screen. The signal-to-noise ratio is adapted based on whether the response given is correct or incorrect. Results: Despite an average improvement of 10 dB on the LiSN & Learn training program, no significant improvements were seen posttraining in either of the spatially separated conditions of the LiSN-S (p ranging 0.47-0.75). A 1.2 dB improvement was found in the baseline condition of the LiSN-S, which incorporates no spatial separation between distracter and target stimuli (p < 0.01). Age did not significantly affect training outcomes (p = 0.21). No significant improvements were found posttraining on the self-report questionnaires (p = 0.84 and p = 0.20). Conclusions: This study has demonstrated that LiSN & Learn training does not significantly improve spatial processing deficits in adults or children with a sensorineural hearing loss. As auditory training did not prove to be effective, further research should be directed toward the development of hearing aid processing schemes that will compensate for the degraded interaural time difference and interaural level difference cues which underpin spatial processing.
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页码:549 / 561
页数:13
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