可靠的在线听觉认知测试:观察研究

Meher Lad, John-Paul Taylor, Timothy Griffiths
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摘要

技术进步使研究人员能够进行远程研究。自 Covid-19 大流行以来,在线听觉测试受到了关注。一些基于网络的开发改进了远程参与过程中听觉任务的范围。这些研究的对象大多是年轻、有上进心、熟悉技术的人。这些研究还使用了测试听觉感知能力的刺激物。对现实世界中老年人听觉认知能力的研究还很缺乏。在这项研究中,我们评估了具有不同听力能力的老年人的一系列听觉认知能力的可重复性,这些老年人参加了现场和在线实验。参与者进行了基于问卷的评估,并被要求完成两项噪音中的言语感知任务(针对数字和句子)和两项听觉记忆任务(针对不同的声音特征)。在研究的第一部分,58 名参与者分别在现场和网上完成了这些测试,以测试任务的可重复性。在第二部分中,147 名参与者在网上完成了所有任务,以检验之前公布的现场研究结果是否具有可重复性。我们发现,70 岁以下的老年人和听力较好的人更愿意参加在线测试。基于问卷的测试的再现性明显优于行为听觉测试,但现场和在线听觉认知指标的再现性没有差异。亲自测试和在线测试中年龄与听阈之间的关系没有显著差异。此外,以前在文献中证实的听觉指标之间的重要关系在网上也具有再现性。这项研究表明,听觉认知测试可以在网上可靠地进行。
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Reliable Online Auditory Cognitive Testing: An observational study
Technological advances have allowed researchers to conduct research remotely. Online auditory testing has received interest since the Covid-19 pandemic. A number of web-based developments have improved the range of auditory tasks during remote participation. Most of these studies have been conducted in young, motivated individuals who are comfortable with technology. Such studies have also used stimuli testing auditory perceptual abilities. Research on auditory cognitive abilities in real-world older adults is lacking. In this study, we assess the reproducibility of a range of auditory cognitive abilities in older adults, with a range of hearing abilities, who took part in in-person and online experiments. Participants performed a questionnaire-based assessment and were asked to complete two verbal speech-in-noise perception tasks, for digits and sentences, and two auditory memory tasks, for different sound features. In the first part of the study, 58 Participants performed these tests in-person and online in order to test the reproducibility of the tasks. In the second part, 147 participants conducted all the tasks online in order to test if previously published findings from in-person research were reproducible. We found that older adults under the age of 70 and those with a better hearing were more likely to take part in online testing. The questionnaire-based test had significantly better reproducibility than the behavioural auditory tests but there were no differences in reproducibility between in-person and online auditory cognitive metrics. Relationships between relationships with age and hearing thresholds in an in-person or online setting were not significantly different. Furthermore, important relationships between auditory metrics, evidenced in literature previously, were reproducible online. This study suggests that auditory cognitive testing may be reliably conducted online.
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