PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Is there an influence of perceptual or cognitive impairment on complex sentence processing in hearing aid users?

  • Luise Wagner,
  • Anna-Leoni A Werle,
  • Antonia Hoffmann,
  • Torsten Rahne,
  • Anja Fengler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291832
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 9
p. e0291832

Abstract

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BackgroundHearing-impaired listeners often have difficulty understanding complex sentences. It is not clear if perceptual or cognitive deficits have more impact on reduced language processing abilities, and how a hearing aid might compensate for that.MethodsIn a prospective study with 5 hearing aid users and 5 normal hearing, age-matched participants, processing of complex sentences was investigated. Audiometric and working memory tests were performed. Subject- and object-initial sentences from the Oldenburg Corpus of Linguistically and audiologically controlled Sentences (OLACS) were presented to the participants during recording of an electroencephalogram (EEG).ResultsThe perceptual difference between object and subject leading sentences does not lead to processing changes whereas the ambiguity in object leading sentences with feminine or neuter articles evokes a P600 potential. For hearing aid users, this P600 has a longer latency compared to normal hearing subjects.ConclusionThe EEG is a suitable method for investigating differences in complex speech processing for hearing aid users. Longer P600 latencies indicate higher cognitive effort for processing complex sentences in hearing aid users.