Hearing-Aid Directionality Improves Neural Speech Tracking in Older Hearing-Impaired Listeners.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Hearing-Aid Directionality Improves Neural Speech Tracking in Older Hearing-Impaired Listeners.
Authors: Petersen, Eline Borch
Source: Trends in Hearing; 6/22/2022, p1-14, 14p
Subject Terms: SPEECH perception, STATISTICS, ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY, PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech, CONFIDENCE intervals, AUDITORY perception, HEARING aids, TASK performance, REGRESSION analysis, HEARING disorders, DATA analysis, DATA analysis software, OLD age
Abstract: In recent years, a growing body of literature has explored the effect of hearing impairment on the neural processing of speech, particularly related to the neural tracking of speech envelopes. However, only limited work has focused on the potential usage of the method for evaluating the effect of hearing aids designed to amplify and process the auditory input provided to hearing-impaired listeners. The current study investigates how directional sound processing in hearing-aids, denoted directionality, affects the neural tracking and encoding of speech in EEG recorded from 11 older hearing-impaired listeners. Behaviorally, the task performance improved when directionality was applied, while subjective ratings of listening effort were not affected. The reconstruction of the to-be-attended speech envelopes improved significantly when applying directionality, as well as when removing the background noise altogether. When inspecting the modelled response of the neural encoding of speech, a faster transition was observed between the early bottom-up response and the later top-down attentional-driven responses when directionality was applied. In summary, hearing-aid directionality affects both the neural speech tracking and neural encoding of to-be-attended speech. This result shows that hearing-aid signal processing impacts the neural processing of sounds and that neural speech tracking is indicative of the benefits associated with applying hearing-aid processing algorithms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Complementary Index
More Details
ISSN:23312165
DOI:10.1177/23312165221099894
Published in:Trends in Hearing
Language:English