Event-Related Potentials of Single-Sided Deaf Cochlear Implant Users: Using a Semantic Oddball Paradigm in Noise.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY Audiology and Neuro-Otology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1159/000529485
Marcus Voola, Andre Wedekind, An T Nguyen, Welber Marinovic, Gunesh Rajan, Dayse Tavora-Vieira
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Abstract

Introduction: In individuals with single-sided deafness (SSD), who are characterised by profound hearing loss in one ear and normal hearing in the contralateral ear, binaural input is no longer present. A cochlear implant (CI) can restore functional hearing in the profoundly deaf ear, with previous literature demonstrating improvements in speech-in-noise intelligibility with the CI. However, we currently have limited understanding of the neural processes involved (e.g., how the brain integrates the electrical signal produced by the CI with the acoustic signal produced by the normal hearing ear) and how modulation of these processes with a CI contributes to improved speech-in-noise intelligibility. Using a semantic oddball paradigm presented in the presence of background noise, this study aims to investigate how the provision of CI impacts speech-in-noise perception of SSD-CI users.

Method: Task performance (reaction time, reaction time variability, target accuracy, subjective listening effort) and high density electroencephalography from twelve SSD-CI participants were recorded, while they completed a semantic acoustic oddball task. Reaction time was defined as the time taken for a participant to press the response button after stimulus onset. All participants completed the oddball task in three different free-field conditions with the speech and noise coming from different speakers. The three tasks were: (1) CI-On in background noise, (2) CI-Off in background noise, and (3) CI-On without background noise (Control). Task performance and electroencephalography data (N2N4 and P3b) were recorded for each condition. Speech in noise and sound localisation ability were also measured.

Results: Reaction time was significantly different between all tasks with CI-On (M [SE] = 809 [39.9] ms) having faster RTs than CI-Off (M [SE] = 845 [39.9] ms) and Control (M [SE] = 785 [39.9] ms) being the fastest condition. The Control condition exhibited significantly shorter N2N4 and P3b area latency compared to the other two conditions. However, despite these differences noticed in RTs and area latency, we observed similar results between all three conditions for N2N4 and P3b difference area.

Conclusion: The inconsistency between the behavioural and neural results suggests that EEG may not be a reliable measure of cognitive effort. This rationale is further supported by different explanations used in past studies to explain N2N4 and P3b effects. Future studies should look to alternative measures of auditory processing (e.g., pupillometry) to gain a deeper understanding of the underlying auditory processes that facilitate speech-in-noise intelligibility.

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单侧耳蜗使用者的事件相关电位:在噪声中使用语义奇球范式。
在单侧耳聋(SSD)患者中,其特征是单耳重度听力损失,对侧听力正常,双耳输入不再存在。人工耳蜗(CI)可以恢复深度耳聋的功能性听力,以前的文献表明,人工耳蜗可以改善噪音中的语音清晰度。然而,我们目前对所涉及的神经过程(例如,大脑如何将CI产生的电信号与正常听力耳朵产生的声信号相结合)以及如何用CI调制这些过程有助于提高噪声中语音的可理解性的理解有限。本研究采用背景噪声条件下的语义奇球范式,旨在探讨CI的提供如何影响SSD-CI用户对噪声中的语音感知。方法:记录12名SSD-CI被试在完成语义声学奇球任务时的任务表现(反应时间、反应时间变异性、目标准确性、主观聆听努力)和高密度脑电图。反应时间定义为参与者在刺激开始后按下反应按钮所花费的时间。所有参与者都在三种不同的自由场条件下完成了这个奇怪的任务,不同的说话者的声音和噪音都来自不同的说话者。三个任务分别是:(1)背景噪声下的CI-On,(2)背景噪声下的CI-Off,(3)无背景噪声下的CI-On (Control)。记录各组的任务表现和脑电图数据(N2N4和P3b)。同时测量了噪声环境下的语音和声音定位能力。结果:所有任务的反应时间差异显著,其中CI-On (M [SE] = 809 [39.9] ms)的反应时间比CI-Off (M [SE] = 845 [39.9] ms)和Control (M [SE] = 785 [39.9] ms)的反应时间快。对照组的N2N4和P3b区潜伏期明显短于其他两组。然而,尽管在RTs和区域延迟方面存在这些差异,我们观察到N2N4和P3b差异区域在所有三种情况下的结果相似。结论:行为和神经结果之间的不一致表明脑电图可能不是认知努力的可靠测量。这一基本原理进一步得到了过去研究中用于解释N2N4和P3b效应的不同解释的支持。未来的研究应该着眼于听觉处理的替代措施(例如,瞳孔测量),以更深入地了解促进噪音中言语可理解性的潜在听觉过程。
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来源期刊
Audiology and Neuro-Otology
Audiology and Neuro-Otology 医学-耳鼻喉科学
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
35
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Audiology and Neurotology'' provides a forum for the publication of the most-advanced and rigorous scientific research related to the basic science and clinical aspects of the auditory and vestibular system and diseases of the ear. This journal seeks submission of cutting edge research opening up new and innovative fields of study that may improve our understanding and treatment of patients with disorders of the auditory and vestibular systems, their central connections and their perception in the central nervous system. In addition to original papers the journal also offers invited review articles on current topics written by leading experts in the field. The journal is of primary importance for all scientists and practitioners interested in audiology, otology and neurotology, auditory neurosciences and related disciplines.
期刊最新文献
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