The effect of motor resource suppression on speech perception in noise in younger and older listeners: An online study

被引:0
作者
Kate Slade
Alanna Beat
Jennifer Taylor
Christopher J. Plack
Helen E. Nuttall
机构
[1] Lancaster University,Neuroscience of Speech and Action Laboratory, Department of Psychology
[2] Lancaster University,Lancaster Medical School
[3] University of Manchester,Manchester Centre for Audiology and Deafness, School of Health Sciences
来源
Psychonomic Bulletin & Review | 2024年 / 31卷
关键词
Ageing; Speech perception; Speech motor; Hearing loss; Auditory-motor;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Speech motor resources may be recruited to assist challenging speech perception in younger normally hearing listeners, but the extent to which this occurs for older adult listeners is unclear. We investigated if speech motor resources are also recruited in older adults during speech perception. Specifically, we investigated if suppression of speech motor resources via sub-vocal rehearsal affects speech perception compared to non-speech motor suppression (jaw movement) and passive listening. Participants identified words in speech-shaped noise at signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) from -16 to +16 dB in three listening conditions during which participants: (1) opened and closed their jaw (non-speech movement); (2) sub-vocally mimed ‘the’ (articulatory suppression); (3) produced no concurrent movement (passive listening). Data from 46 younger adults (M age = 20.17 years, SD = 1.61, 36 female) and 41 older adults (M age = 69 years, SD = 5.82, 21 female) were analysed. Linear mixed effects modelling investigated the impact of age, listening condition, and self-reported hearing ability on speech perception (d’ prime). Results indicated that speech perception ability was significantly worse in older adults relative to younger adults across all listening conditions. A significant interaction between age group and listening condition indicated that younger adults showed poorer performance during articulatory suppression compared to passive listening, but older adults performed equivalently across conditions. This finding suggests that speech motor resources are less available to support speech perception in older adults, providing important insights for auditory-motor integration for speech understanding and communication in ageing.
引用
收藏
页码:389 / 400
页数:11
相关论文
共 175 条
[1]  
Adank P(2012)The Neural Bases of Difficult Speech Comprehension and Speech Production: Two Activation Likelihood Estimation (ALE) Meta-Analyses Brain and Language 122 42-54
[2]  
Bates D(2015)Fitting linear mixed-effects models using lme4 Journal of Statistical Software 67 1-48
[3]  
Mächler M(2020)Age-Related Hearing Loss, Late-Life Depression, and Risk for Incident Dementia in Older Adults The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry 28 90-93
[4]  
Bolker B(2020)The Timing Mega-Study: Comparing a Range of Experiment Generators Both Lab-Based and Online. PeerJ 8 e9414-887
[5]  
Walker S(2012)The Role of the Motor System in Discriminating Normal and Degraded Speech Sounds Cortex 48 882-7131
[6]  
Brewster K(2015)Hearing Loss and Cognition: The Role of Hearing Aids Social Isolation and Depression. PLoS ONE 10 e0119616-504
[7]  
Wall M(2014)Noise Differentially Impacts Phoneme Representations in the Auditory and Speech Motor Systems Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 7126-521
[8]  
Stein A(2016)Increased Activity in Frontal Motor Cortex Compensates Impaired Speech Perception in Older Adults Nature Communications 7 12241-412
[9]  
Zilcha-Mano S(2013)The Impact of Age and Motivation on Cognitive Effort: Implications for Cognitive Engagement in Older Adulthood Psychology and Aging 28 495-422
[10]  
Rutherford BR(1915)Frequency Distribution of the Values of the Correlation Coefficient in Samples from an Indefinitely Large Population Biometrika 10 507-92