Audiovisual Training in Virtual Reality Improves Auditory Spatial Adaptation in Unilateral Hearing Loss Patients

Author:

Alzaher Mariam12,Valzolgher Chiara34ORCID,Verdelet Grégoire45,Pavani Francesco346ORCID,Farnè Alessandro345ORCID,Barone Pascal1ORCID,Marx Mathieu12

Affiliation:

1. Research Center of Brain and Cognition, CerCo, CNRS, 31000 Toulouse, France

2. ENT Department, University Hospital of Purpan, 31000 Toulouse, France

3. Center for Mind/Brain Sciences—CIMeC, University of Trento, 38100 Trento, Italy

4. Impact Team of the Lyon Neuroscience Research Centre INSERM U1028 CNRS UMR5292, University Claude Bernard Lyon I, 69000 Lyon, France

5. Neuroimmersion, Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, 69000 Lyon, France

6. Centro Interuniversitario di Ricerca “Cognizione, Linguaggio e Sordità”—CIRCLeS, University of Trento, 38100 Trento, Italy

Abstract

Unilateral hearing loss (UHL) leads to an alteration of binaural cues resulting in a significant increment of spatial errors in the horizontal plane. In this study, nineteen patients with UHL were recruited and randomized in a cross-over design into two groups; a first group (n = 9) that received spatial audiovisual training in the first session and a non-spatial audiovisual training in the second session (2 to 4 weeks after the first session). A second group (n = 10) received the same training in the opposite order (non-spatial and then spatial). A sound localization test using head-pointing (LOCATEST) was completed prior to and following each training session. The results showed a significant decrease in head-pointing localization errors after spatial training for group 1 (24.85° ± 15.8° vs. 16.17° ± 11.28°; p < 0.001). The number of head movements during the spatial training for the 19 participants did not change (p = 0.79); nonetheless, the hand-pointing errors and reaction times significantly decreased at the end of the spatial training (p < 0.001). This study suggests that audiovisual spatial training can improve and induce spatial adaptation to a monaural deficit through the optimization of effective head movements. Virtual reality systems are relevant tools that can be used in clinics to develop training programs for patients with hearing impairments.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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