학술논문

Amplitude Modulation Perception and Cortical Evoked Potentials in Children with Listening Difficulties and Their Typically Developing Peers
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Author
Lauren Petley (ORCID 0000-0002-6498-3267); Chelsea Blankenship (ORCID 0000-0003-2355-7920); Lisa L. HunterHannah J. StewartLi LinDavid R. Moore (ORCID 0000-0002-1567-1945)
Source
Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research. 2024 67(2):633-656.
Subject
Listening Comprehension
Auditory Discrimination
Auditory Perception
Children
Speech Communication
Intelligibility
Acoustics
Hearing (Physiology)
Audiometric Tests
Brain Hemisphere Functions
Language
English
ISSN
1092-4388
1558-9102
Abstract
Purpose: Amplitude modulations (AMs) are important for speech intelligibility, and deficits in speech intelligibility are a leading source of impairment in childhood listening difficulties (LiD). The present study aimed to explore the relationships between AM perception and speech-in-noise (SiN) comprehension in children and to determine whether deficits in AM processing contribute to childhood LiD. Evoked responses were used to parse the neural origins of AM processing. Method: Forty-one children with LiD and 44 typically developing children, ages 8-16 years, participated in the study. Behavioral AM depth thresholds were measured at 4 and 40 Hz. SiN tasks included the Listening in Spatialized Noise-Sentences Test (LiSN-S) and a coordinate response measure (CRM)- based task. Evoked responses were obtained during an AM change detection task using alternations between 4 and 40 Hz, including the N1 of the acoustic change complex, auditory steady-state response (ASSR), P300, and a late positive response (late potential [LP]). Maturational effects were explored via age correlations. Results: Age correlated with 4-Hz AM thresholds, CRM separated talker scores, and N1 amplitude. Age-normed LiSN-S scores obtained without spatial or talker cues correlated with age-corrected 4-Hz AM thresholds and area under the LP curve. CRM separated talker scores correlated with AM thresholds and area under the LP curve. Most behavioral measures of AM perception correlated with the signal-to-noise ratio and phase coherence of the 40-Hz ASSR. AM change response time also correlated with area under the LP curve. Children with LiD exhibited deficits with respect to 4-Hz thresholds, AM change accuracy, and area under the LP curve. Conclusions: The observed relationships between AM perception and SiN performance extend the evidence that modulation perception is important for understanding SiN in childhood. In line with this finding, children with LiD demonstrated poorer performance on some measures of AM perception, but their evoked responses implicated a primarily cognitive deficit.