Effects of Aging on the Subcortical Encoding of Stop Consonants

Author:

Rishiq Dania1ORCID,Harkrider Ashley2,Springer Cary3,Hedrick Mark2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, College of Allied Health Professions, University of South Alabama, Mobile

2. Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Knoxville

3. Office of Information Technology, Research Computing Support, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Abstract

Purpose The main purpose of this study was to evaluate aging effects on the predominantly subcortical (brainstem) encoding of the second-formant frequency transition, an essential acoustic cue for perceiving place of articulation. Method Synthetic consonant–vowel syllables varying in second-formant onset frequency (i.e., /ba/, /da/, and /ga/ stimuli) were used to elicit speech-evoked auditory brainstem responses (speech-ABRs) in 16 young adults ( M age = 21 years) and 11 older adults ( M age = 59 years). Repeated-measures mixed-model analyses of variance were performed on the latencies and amplitudes of the speech-ABR peaks. Fixed factors were phoneme (repeated measures on three levels: /b/ vs. /d/ vs. /g/) and age (two levels: young vs. older). Results Speech-ABR differences were observed between the two groups (young vs. older adults). Specifically, older listeners showed generalized amplitude reductions for onset and major peaks. Significant Phoneme × Group interactions were not observed. Conclusions Results showed aging effects in speech-ABR amplitudes that may reflect diminished subcortical encoding of consonants in older listeners. These aging effects were not phoneme dependent as observed using the statistical methods of this study.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing

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