Abstract
SUMMARYListeners with sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) struggle to understand speech, especially in noise, despite audibility compensation. These real-world suprathreshold deficits are hypothesized to arise from degraded frequency tuning and reduced temporal-coding precision; however, peripheral neurophysiological studies testing these hypotheses have been largely limited to in-quiet artificial vowels. Here, we measured single auditory-nerve-fiber responses to a natural speech sentence in noise from anesthetized chinchillas with normal hearing (NH) or noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL). Our results demonstrate that temporal precision was not degraded, and broader tuning was not the major factor affecting peripheral coding of natural speech in noise. Rather, the loss of cochlear tonotopy, a hallmark of normal hearing, had the most significant effects (both on vowels and consonants). Because distorted tonotopy varies in degree across etiologies (e.g., noise exposure, age), these results have important implications for understanding and treating individual differences in speech perception for people suffering from SNHL.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference85 articles.
1. Auerbach, B.D. , Rodrigues, P.V. , and Salvi, R.J. (2014). Central Gain Control in Tinnitus and Hyperacusis. Front. Neurol. 5.
2. Bates, D. , Mächler, M. , Bolker, B. , and Walker, S. (2014). Fitting linear mixed-effects models using lme4. ArXiv Prepr. ArXiv14065823.
3. Bharadwaj, H.M. , Verhulst, S. , Shaheen, L. , Liberman, M.C. , and Shinn-Cunningham, B.G. (2014). Cochlear neuropathy and the coding of supra-threshold sound. Front. Syst. Neurosci. 8.
4. Consonant confusions in patients with sensorineural hearing loss;J. Speech Hear. Res,1976
5. Praat, a system for doing phonetics by computer;Glot Int,2001