The effects of age and hearing impairment on the extraction of listening effort correlates

In clinical practice, an objective method to assess listening effort is still not available. The benefit of such a measure would be to reduce the listening effort in hearing impaired persons by an adequate adaption of their personal hearing aids. In foregoing studies, we have shown that the wavelet...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:2011 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society Vol. 2011; pp. 2323 - 2326
Main Authors: Bernarding, C., Strauss, D. J., Hannemann, R., Latzel, M., Seidler, H., Jobst, U., Bellagnech, A., Landwehr, M., Corona-Strauss, F. I.
Format: Conference Proceeding Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States IEEE 01-01-2011
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Summary:In clinical practice, an objective method to assess listening effort is still not available. The benefit of such a measure would be to reduce the listening effort in hearing impaired persons by an adequate adaption of their personal hearing aids. In foregoing studies, we have shown that the wavelet phase synchronization stability (WPSS) of auditory late responses (ALRs) could serve as a feasible measure of listening effort. Here, tonal and noise embedded syllabic paradigms were employed to achieve ALR sequences in normal hearing subjects. The aims of this ongoing study were 1) to extract the WPSS of ALR sequences in hearing impaired persons, middle-aged normal hearing persons and younger normal hearing subjects, 2) to investigate possible age-related influences on the WPSS and 3) to examine a feasible influence of the hearing loss on the WPSS. It is concluded, that the WPSS of ALR sequences can be extracted in normal hearing as well as in hearing impaired persons. An age related effect regarding the WPSS was not noticeable and the intergroup comparison of the difference of the WPSS showed a tendency to be larger for the hearing impaired compared to the normal hearing middle-aged subjects. The latest can be interpreted that this subject group showed a larger effort to solve the auditory paradigms.
ISBN:9781424441211
1424441218
ISSN:1094-687X
1557-170X
1558-4615
DOI:10.1109/IEMBS.2011.6090650