4.5 Article

The effect of healthy aging on change detection and sensitivity to predictable structure in crowded acoustic scenes

Journal

HEARING RESEARCH
Volume 399, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.heares.2020.108074

Keywords

Temporal regularity; Auditory scene analysis; Change detection; Ageing; Time perception; Change deafness; Predictive coding

Funding

  1. Action on Hearing Loss
  2. BBSRC [BB/P003745/1]
  3. Medical Research Senior Fellowship [MR/S002537/1]
  4. BBSRC [BB/P003745/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. MRC [MR/S002537/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The auditory system plays a critical role in detecting abrupt changes in our surroundings. Healthy aging is associated with reduced sensitivity to abrupt scene changes in RAND scenes, but older listeners' change detection performance improved substantially in REG relative to RAND scenes, suggesting that the ability to extract and track regularity in crowded acoustic environments is relatively preserved in older listeners.
The auditory system plays a critical role in supporting our ability to detect abrupt changes in our surroundings. Here we study how this capacity is affected in the course of healthy ageing. Artifical acoustic 'scenes', populated by multiple concurrent streams of pure tones ('sources') were used to capture the challenges of listening in complex acoustic environments. Two scene conditions were included: REG scenes consisted of sources characterized by a regular temporal structure. Matched RAND scenes contained sources which were temporally random. Changes, manifested as the abrupt disappearance of one of the sources, were introduced to a subset of the trials and participants ('young' group N = 41, age 20-38 years; 'older' group N = 41, age 60-82 years) were instructed to monitor the scenes for these events. Previous work demonstrated that young listeners exhibit better change detection performance in REG scenes, reflecting sensitivity to temporal structure. Here we sought to determine: (1) Whether 'baseline' change detection ability (i.e. in RAND scenes) is affected by age. (2) Whether aging affects listeners' sensitivity to temporal regularity. (3) How change detection capacity relates to listeners' hearing and cognitive profile (a battery of tests that capture hearing and cognitive abilities hypothesized to be affected by aging). The results demonstrated that healthy aging is associated with reduced sensitivity to abrupt scene changes in RAND scenes but that performance does not correlate with age or standard audiological measures such as pure tone audiometry or speech in noise performance. Remarkably older listeners' change detection performance improved substantially (up to the level exhibited by young listeners) in REG relative to RAND scenes. This suggests that the ability to extract and track the regularity associated with scene sources, even in crowded acoustic environments, is relatively preserved in older listeners. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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