Speech Auditory Brainstem Responses in Adult Hearing Aid Users: Effects of Aiding and Background Noise, and Prediction of Behavioral Measures

Author:

BinKhamis Ghada12ORCID,Elia Forte Antonio3,Reichenbach Tobias4,O’Driscoll Martin15,Kluk Karolina1

Affiliation:

1. Manchester Centre for Audiology and Deafness, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, UK

2. Department of Communication and Swallowing Disorders, King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

3. John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

4. Department of Bioengineering, Centre for Neurotechnology, Imperial College London, London, UK

5. Manchester Auditory Implant Centre, Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK

Abstract

Evaluation of patients who are unable to provide behavioral responses on standard clinical measures is challenging due to the lack of standard objective (non-behavioral) clinical audiological measures that assess the outcome of an intervention (e.g., hearing aids). Brainstem responses to short consonant-vowel stimuli (speech-auditory brainstem responses [speech-ABRs]) have been proposed as a measure of subcortical encoding of speech, speech detection, and speech-in-noise performance in individuals with normal hearing. Here, we investigated the potential application of speech-ABRs as an objective clinical outcome measure of speech detection, speech-in-noise detection and recognition, and self-reported speech understanding in 98 adults with sensorineural hearing loss. We compared aided and unaided speech-ABRs, and speech-ABRs in quiet and in noise. In addition, we evaluated whether speech-ABR F0 encoding (obtained from the complex cross-correlation with the 40 ms [da] fundamental waveform) predicted aided behavioral speech recognition in noise or aided self-reported speech understanding. Results showed that (a) aided speech-ABRs had earlier peak latencies, larger peak amplitudes, and larger F0 encoding amplitudes compared to unaided speech-ABRs; (b) the addition of background noise resulted in later F0 encoding latencies but did not have an effect on peak latencies and amplitudes or on F0 encoding amplitudes; and (c) speech-ABRs were not a significant predictor of any of the behavioral or self-report measures. These results show that speech-ABR F0 encoding is not a good predictor of speech-in-noise recognition or self-reported speech understanding with hearing aids. However, our results suggest that speech-ABRs may have potential for clinical application as an objective measure of speech detection with hearing aids.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Saudi Arabian Ministry of Education and King Fahad Medical City

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Otorhinolaryngology

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