iScience (Apr 2024)

The effects of aging and hearing impairment on listening in noise

  • Ádám Boncz,
  • Orsolya Szalárdy,
  • Péter Kristóf Velősy,
  • Luca Béres,
  • Robert Baumgartner,
  • István Winkler,
  • Brigitta Tóth

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 4
p. 109295

Abstract

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Summary: The study investigates age-related decline in listening abilities, particularly in noisy environments, where the challenge lies in extracting meaningful information from variable sensory input (figure-ground segregation). The research focuses on peripheral and central factors contributing to this decline using a tone-cloud-based figure detection task. Results based on behavioral measures and event-related brain potentials (ERPs) indicate that, despite delayed perceptual processes and some deterioration in attention and executive functions with aging, the ability to detect sound sources in noise remains relatively intact. However, even mild hearing impairment significantly hampers the segregation of individual sound sources within a complex auditory scene. The severity of the hearing deficit correlates with an increased susceptibility to masking noise. The study underscores the impact of hearing impairment on auditory scene analysis and highlights the need for personalized interventions based on individual abilities.

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