4.5 Article

Age-Related Changes in Voice Emotion Recognition by Postlingually Deafened Listeners With Cochlear Implants

Journal

EAR AND HEARING
Volume 43, Issue 2, Pages 323-334

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000001095

Keywords

Adult; Cochlear implants; Hearing; Reaction time; Speech

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 DC014233, P20 GM10923]
  2. NIH [R01 DC014233 04S1]

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This study found that cochlear implant users have deficits in vocal emotion recognition, and these deficits become more pronounced with age. The results suggest a link between age and the effects of cochlear implantation on emotion recognition.
Objectives: Identification of emotional prosody in speech declines with age in normally hearing (NH) adults. Cochlear implant (CI) users have deficits in the perception of prosody, but the effects of age on vocal emotion recognition by adult postlingually deaf CI users are not known. The objective of the present study was to examine age-related changes in CI users' and NH listeners' emotion recognition. Design: Participants included 18 CI users (29.6 to 74.5 years) and 43 NH adults (25.8 to 74.8 years). Participants listened to emotion-neutral sentences spoken by a male and female talker in five emotions (happy, sad, scared, angry, neutral). NH adults heard them in four conditions: unprocessed (full spectrum) speech, 16-channel, 8-channel, and 4-channel noise-band vocoded speech. The adult CI users only listened to unprocessed (full spectrum) speech. Sensitivity (d') to emotions and Reaction Times were obtained using a single-interval, five-alternative, forced-choice paradigm. Results: For NH participants, results indicated age-related declines in Accuracy and d', and age-related increases in Reaction Time in all conditions. Results indicated an overall deficit, as well as age-related declines in overall d' for CI users, but Reaction Times were elevated compared with NH listeners and did not show age-related changes. Analysis of Accuracy scores (hit rates) were generally consistent with d' data. Conclusions: Both CI users and NH listeners showed age-related deficits in emotion identification. The CI users' overall deficit in emotion perception, and their slower response times, suggest impaired social communication which may in turn impact overall well-being, particularly so for older CI users, as lower vocal emotion recognition scores have been associated with poorer subjective quality of life in CI patients.

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