cortical auditory temporal processing abilities in elderly listeners

Authors

aseel al-meqbel department of hearing and speech sciences, faculty of allied health sciences, health sciences center, kuwait university, kuwait, kuwait

catherine mcmahon linguistics department, faculty of human sciences, macquarie university, the hearing cooperative research centre, sydney, australia

abstract

background and aim: this study investigated whether objective temporal processing paradigms including voice-onset-time, speech-in-noise, and amplitude modulated-broad-band noise (am-bbn) are sensitive to disrupted temporal processing in elderly listeners with normal hearing (age-related-temporal processing deficit). methods: we evaluated 15 adults aged 64–80 years using behavioural measures of temporal processing temporal modulation transfer function (tmtf) and speech perception. cortical auditory evoked potentials (caeps) were elicited by three temporal paradigms presented in the sound field at 65 dbspl: (1) naturally produced stop consonant-vowel (cv) syllables /da/-/ta/ and /ba/-/pa/; (2) speech-in-noise stimuli using the speech sound /da/with varying signal-to-noise ratios (snrs); and (3) 16 hz amplitude-modulated (am) bbn presented in two conditions: (i) alone (representing a temporally modulated stimulus) and (ii) following an unmodulated bbn (representing a temporal change in the stimulus) using four modulation depths. results: findings demonstrated a statistically significant mean difference in n1 latency (p<0.05) between normally hearing elderly and young adult listeners in all paradigms. compared with young adult participants, n1 latency of the caep was always prolonged for elderly participants. conclusion: the three developed temporal processing paradigms are sensitive to disrupted temporal processing in elderly participants, and n1 latency may serve as a reliable objective measure of the efficiency of auditory temporal processing. the aging process affects temporal representations of the acoustic stimulus and reduces the ability to detect temporal cues, evidenced by abnormal n1 latency.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Auditory temporal processing in elderly listeners.

This paper examines the hypothesis that auditory temporal processing is impaired in elderly listeners. Several recent psychoacoustic studies are reviewed that describe various aspects of temporal processing that appear to be influenced by aging. The temporal phenomena range from measures of temporal resolution and duration discrimination to sequential processing of complex stimulus patterns. Fo...

full text

Auditory Temporal Processing Abilities in Early Azari-Persian Bilinguals

Introduction: Auditory temporal resolution and auditory temporal ordering are two major components of the auditory temporal processing abilities that contribute to speech perception and language development. Auditory temporal resolution and auditory temporal ordering can be evaluated by gap-in-noise (GIN) and pitch-pattern-sequence (PPS) tests, respectively. In this survey, the effect of biling...

full text

Auditory Cortical Temporal Processing Abilities in Young Adults

Purpose: To evaluate whether cortical encoding of temporal processing ability, using the N1 peak of the cortical auditory evoked potential, could be measured in normally hearing young adults using three paradigms: voice-onsettime, speech-in-noise and amplitude-modulated broadband noise. Research design: Cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) were elicited using: (1) naturally produced stop...

full text

auditory temporal processing abilities in early azari-persian bilinguals

introduction: auditory temporal resolution and auditory temporal ordering are two major components of the auditory temporal processing abilities that contribute to speech perception and language development. auditory temporal resolution and auditory temporal ordering can be evaluated by gap-in-noise (gin) and pitch-pattern-sequence (pps) tests, respectively. in this survey, the effect of biling...

full text

Auditory temporal-order processing of vowel sequences by young and elderly listeners.

This project focused on the individual differences underlying observed variability in temporal processing among older listeners. Four measures of vowel temporal-order identification were completed by young (N=35; 18-31 years) and older (N=151; 60-88 years) listeners. Experiments used forced-choice, constant-stimuli methods to determine the smallest stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) between brief ...

full text

Auditory processing in aging listeners.

Many aspects of auditory processing in aging listeners are poorly understood. Methodological problems encountered with the aging population, ranging from ear canal collapse to a conservative criterion, have rarely been considered in past research. The relation between pure-tone thresholds and other aspects of auditory functions is unclear. There have been few studies of frequency and temporal a...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
auditory and vestibular research

جلد ۲۴، شماره ۲، صفحات ۸۰-۹۱

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023