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Are Experienced Hearing Aid Users Faster at Grasping the Meaning of a Sentence Than Inexperienced Users? An Eye-Tracking Study

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Journal Trends Hear
Date 2016 Sep 7
PMID 27595793
Citations 8
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Abstract

This study assessed the effects of hearing aid (HA) experience on how quickly a participant can grasp the meaning of an acoustic sentence-in-noise stimulus presented together with two similar pictures that either correctly (target) or incorrectly (competitor) depict the meaning conveyed by the sentence. Using an eye tracker, the time taken by the participant to start fixating the target (the processing time) was measured for two levels of linguistic complexity (low vs. high) and three HA conditions: clinical linear amplification (National Acoustic Laboratories-Revised), single-microphone noise reduction with National Acoustic Laboratories-Revised, and linear amplification ensuring a sensation level of ≥ 15 dB up to at least 4 kHz for the speech material used here. Timed button presses to the target stimuli after the end of the sentences (offline reaction times) were also collected. Groups of experienced (eHA) and inexperienced (iHA) HA users matched in terms of age, hearing loss, and working memory capacity took part (N = 15 each). For the offline reaction times, no effects were found. In contrast, processing times increased with linguistic complexity. Furthermore, for all HA conditions, processing times were longer (poorer) for the iHA group than for the eHA group, despite comparable speech recognition performance. Taken together, these results indicate that processing times are more sensitive to speech processing-related factors than offline reaction times. Furthermore, they support the idea that HA experience positively impacts the ability to process noisy speech quickly, irrespective of the precise gain characteristics.

Citing Articles

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Speech Perception in Older Adults: An Interplay of Hearing, Cognition, and Learning?.

Shechter Shvartzman L, Lavie L, Banai K Front Psychol. 2022; 13:816864.

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Effects of age-related hearing loss and hearing aid experience on sentence processing.

Vogelzang M, Thiel C, Rosemann S, Rieger J, Ruigendijk E Sci Rep. 2021; 11(1):5994.

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Auditory Recognition of Digit-in-Noise under Unaided and Aided Conditions in Moderate and Severe Sensorineural Hearing Loss.

Aghasoleimani M, Jalilvand H, Mahdavi M, Ahmadi R J Audiol Otol. 2020; 25(2):72-79.

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[Speech comprehension and cognitive performance in acoustically difficult situations].

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