Cognitive Compensation of Speech Perception With Hearing Impairment, Cochlear Implants, and Aging

Author:

Başkent Deniz123,Clarke Jeanne123,Pals Carina123,Benard Michel R.14,Bhargava Pranesh123,Saija Jefta123,Sarampalis Anastasios35,Wagner Anita123,Gaudrain Etienne1236

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otorhinolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Netherlands

2. Graduate School of Medical Sciences, University of Groningen, Netherlands

3. Research School of Behavioural and Cognitive Neurosciences, University of Groningen, Netherlands

4. Pento Speech and Hearing Center Zwolle, Zwolle, Netherlands

5. Department of Psychology, University of Groningen, Netherlands

6. Auditory Cognition and Psychoacoustics, CNRS, Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, Lyon, France

Abstract

External degradations in incoming speech reduce understanding, and hearing impairment further compounds the problem. While cognitive mechanisms alleviate some of the difficulties, their effectiveness may change with age. In our research, reviewed here, we investigated cognitive compensation with hearing impairment, cochlear implants, and aging, via (a) phonemic restoration as a measure of top-down filling of missing speech, (b) listening effort and response times as a measure of increased cognitive processing, and (c) visual world paradigm and eye gazing as a measure of the use of context and its time course. Our results indicate that between speech degradations and their cognitive compensation, there is a fine balance that seems to vary greatly across individuals. Hearing impairment or inadequate hearing device settings may limit compensation benefits. Cochlear implants seem to allow the effective use of sentential context, but likely at the cost of delayed processing. Linguistic and lexical knowledge, which play an important role in compensation, may be successfully employed in advanced age, as some compensatory mechanisms seem to be preserved. These findings indicate that cognitive compensation in hearing impairment can be highly complicated—not always absent, but also not easily predicted by speech intelligibility tests only.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Otorhinolaryngology

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