4.5 Article

Musical Experience Offsets Age-Related Decline in Understanding Speech-in-Noise: Type of Training Does Not Matter, Working Memory Is the Key

Journal

EAR AND HEARING
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 258-270

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000921

Keywords

Aging; Auditory working memory; Musical training; Speech-in-noise perception

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31671172, 31822024]
  2. Thousand Talent Program for Young Outstanding Scientists
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB32010300]

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The study found that musical training can offset age-related decline in speech perception ability by preserving auditory working memory in adverse listening conditions. Older musicians demonstrated better auditory working memory and outperformed older nonmusicians in all SIN conditions, while this musician advantage was not present in young adults.
Objectives: Speech comprehension under cocktail party scenarios deteriorates with age even in the absence of measurable hearing loss. Musical training is suggested to counteract the age-related decline in speech-in-noise (SIN) perception, yet which aspect of musical plasticity contributes to this compensation remains unclear. This study aimed to investigate the effects of musical experience and aging on SIN perception ability. We hypothesized a key mediation role of auditory working memory in ameliorating deficient SIN perception in older adults by musical training. Design: Forty-eight older musicians, 29 older nonmusicians, 48 young musicians, and 24 young nonmusicians all with (near) normal peripheral hearing were recruited. The SIN task was recognizing nonsense speech sentences either perceptually colocated or separated with a noise masker (energetic masking) or a two-talker speech masker (informational masking). Auditory working memory was measured by auditory digit span. Path analysis was used to examine the direct and indirect effects of musical expertise and age on SIN perception performance. Results: Older musicians outperformed older nonmusicians in auditory working memory and all SIN conditions (noise separation, noise colocation, speech separation, speech colocation), but such musician advantages were absent in young adults. Path analysis showed that age and musical training had opposite effects on auditory working memory, which played a significant mediation role in SIN perception. In addition, the type of musical training did not differentiate SIN perception regardless of age. Conclusions: These results provide evidence that musical training offsets age-related speech perception deficit at adverse listening conditions by preserving auditory working memory. Our findings highlight auditory working memory in supporting speech perception amid competing noise in older adults, and underline musical training as a means of cognitive reserve against declines in speech comprehension and cognition in aging populations.

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