Effects of Age on Auditory and Cognitive Processing: Implications for Hearing Aid Fitting and Audiologic Rehabilitation
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 March 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Trends in Amplification
- Vol. 10 (1) , 29-59
- https://doi.org/10.1177/108471380601000103
Abstract
Recent advances in research and clinical practice concerning aging and auditory communication have been driven by questions about age-related differences in peripheral hearing, central auditory processing, and cognitive processing. A “site-of-lesion” view based on anatomic levels inspired research to test competing hypotheses about the contributions of changes at these three levels of the nervous system. A “processing” view based on psychologic functions inspired research to test alternative hypotheses about how lower-level sensory processes and higher-level cognitive processes interact. In the present paper, we suggest that these two views can begin to be unified following the example set by the cognitive neuroscience of aging. The early pioneers of audiology anticipated such a unified view, but today, advances in science and technology make it both possible and necessary. Specifically, we argue that a synthesis of new knowledge concerning the functional neuroscience of auditory cognition is necessary to inform the design and fitting of digital signal processing in “intelligent” hearing devices, as well as to inform best practices for resituating hearing aid fitting in a broader context of audiologic rehabilitation. Long-standing approaches to rehabilitative audiology should be revitalized to emphasize the important role that training and therapy play in promoting compensatory brain reorganization as older adults acclimatize to new technologies. The purpose of the present paper is to provide an integrated framework for understanding how auditory and cognitive processing interact when older adults listen, comprehend, and communicate in realistic situations, to review relevant models and findings, and to suggest how new knowledge about age-related changes in audition and cognition may influence future developments in hearing aid fitting and audiologic rehabilitation.Keywords
This publication has 157 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cognitive performance and perceived effort in speech processing tasks: effects of different noise backgrounds in normal-hearing and hearing-impaired subjects Desempeño cognitivo y percepción del esfuerzo en tareas de procesamiento del lenguaje: Efectos de las diferentes condiciones de fondo en sujetos normales e hipoacúsicosInternational Journal of Audiology, 2005
- Age-Related Preservation of Top-Down Attentional Guidance During Visual Search.Psychology and Aging, 2004
- Does the Information Content of an Irrelevant Source Differentially Affect Spoken Word Recognition in Younger and Older Adults?Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
- Location and frequency cues in auditory selective attention.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2001
- Wisdom: A metaheuristic (pragmatic) to orchestrate mind and virtue toward excellence.American Psychologist, 2000
- Age-related changes in processing auditory stimuli during visual attention: Evidence for deficits in inhibitory control and sensory memory.Psychology and Aging, 1999
- Regaining lost time: Adult aging and the effect of time restoration on recall of time-compressed speech.Psychology and Aging, 1999
- The discrepancy between hearing impairment and handicap in the elderly: Balancing transaction and interaction in conversationJournal of Applied Communication Research, 1998
- Psychoacoustic and phonetic temporal processing in normal and hearing-impaired listenersThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1982
- Some Experiments on the Recognition of Speech, with One and with Two EarsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1953