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Neural Correlates of Individual Differences in Speech-in- Noise Performance in a Large Cohort of Cochlear Implant Users

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Abstract
Objectives: Understanding speech-in-noise (SiN) is a complex task that recruits multiple cortical subsystems. Individuals vary in their ability to understand SiN. This cannot be explained by simple peripheral hearing profiles, but recent work by our group ( Kim et al. 2021 , Neuroimage ) highlighted central neural factors underlying the variance in SiN ability in normal hearing (NH) subjects. The present study examined neural predictors of SiN ability in a large cohort of cochlear-implant (CI) users.

Design: We recorded electroencephalography in 114 postlingually deafened CI users while they completed the California consonant test: a word-in-noise task. In many subjects, data were also collected on two other commonly used clinical measures of speech perception: a word-in-quiet task (consonant-nucleus-consonant) word and a sentence-in-noise task (AzBio sentences). Neural activity was assessed at a vertex electrode (Cz), which could help maximize eventual generalizability to clinical situations. The N1-P2 complex of event-related potentials (ERPs) at this location were included in multiple linear regression analyses, along with several other demographic and hearing factors as predictors of SiN performance.

Results: In general, there was a good agreement between the scores on the three speech perception tasks. ERP amplitudes did not predict AzBio performance, which was predicted by the duration of device use, low-frequency hearing thresholds, and age. However, ERP amplitudes were strong predictors for performance for both word recognition tasks: the California consonant test (which was conducted simultaneously with electroencephalography recording) and the consonant-nucleus-consonant (conducted offline). These correlations held even after accounting for known predictors of performance including residual low-frequency hearing thresholds. In CI-users, better performance was predicted by an increased cortical response to the target word, in contrast to previous reports in normal-hearing subjects in whom speech perception ability was accounted for by the ability to suppress noise.

Conclusions: These data indicate a neurophysiological correlate of SiN performance, thereby revealing a richer profile of an individual's hearing performance than shown by psychoacoustic measures alone. These results also highlight important differences between sentence and word recognition measures of performance and suggest that individual differences in these measures may be underwritten by different mechanisms. Finally, the contrast with prior reports of NH listeners in the same task suggests CI-users performance may be explained by a different weighting of neural processes than NH listeners.
Issued Date
2023
Joel I Berger
Phillip E Gander
Subong Kim
Adam T Schwalje
Jihwan Woo
Young-Min Na
Ann Holmes
Jean M Hong
Camille C Dunn
Marlan R Hansen
Bruce J Gantz
Bob McMurray
Timothy D Griffiths
Inyong Choi
Type
Article
Keyword
CorticalEEGHearing impairedN1-P2Speech perceptionTranslational
DOI
10.1097/AUD.0000000000001357
URI
https://oak.ulsan.ac.kr/handle/2021.oak/17202
Publisher
EAR AND HEARING
Language
영어
ISSN
0196-0202
Citation Volume
44
Citation Number
5
Citation Start Page
1107
Citation End Page
1120
Appears in Collections:
Engineering > Interdisciplinary Science
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