Abstract

With the rise of the aging population, many scientists studying multisensory integration have turned toward understanding how this process may change with age. This scoping review was conducted to understand and describe the scope and rigor with which researchers studying audiovisual sensory integration screen for hearing and vision impairment. A structured search in three licensed databases (Scopus, PubMed, and PsychInfo) using the key concepts of multisensory integration, audiovisual modality, and aging revealed 2,462 articles, which were screened for inclusion by two reviewers. Articles were included if they (1) tested healthy older adults (minimum mean or median age of 60) with younger adults as a comparison (mean or median age between 18 and 35), (2) measured auditory and visual integration, (3) were written in English, and (4) reported behavioral outcomes. Articles that included the following were excluded: (1) tested taste exclusively, (2) tested olfaction exclusively, (3) tested somatosensation exclusively, (4) tested emotion perception, (5) were not written in English, (6) were clinical commentaries, editorials, interviews, letters, newspaper articles, abstracts only, or non-peer reviewed literature (e.g., theses), and (7) focused on neuroimaging without a behavioral component. Data pertaining to the details of the study (e.g., country of publication, year of publication, etc.) were extracted, however, of higher importance to our research question, data pertaining to screening measures used for hearing and vision impairment (e.g., type of test used, whether hearing- and visual-aids were worn, thresholds used, etc.) were extracted, collated, and summarized. Our search revealed that only 64% of studies screened for age-abnormal hearing impairment, 51% screened for age-abnormal vision impairment, and that consistent definitions of normal or abnormal vision and hearing were not used among the studies that screened for sensory abilities. A total of 1,624 younger adults and 4,778 older participants were included in the scoping review with males composing approximately 44% and females composing 56% of the total sample and most of the data was obtained from only four countries. We recommend that studies investigating the effects of aging on multisensory integration should screen for normal vision and hearing by using the World Health Organization's (WHO) hearing loss and visual impairment cut-off scores in order to maintain consistency among other aging researchers. As mild cognitive impairment (MCI) has been defined as a “transitional” or a “transitory” stage between normal aging and dementia and because approximately 3–5% of the aging population will develop MCI each year, it is therefore important that when researchers aim to study a healthy aging population, that they appropriately screen for MCI. One of our secondary aims was to determine how often researchers were screening for cognitive impairment and the types of tests that were used to do so. Our results revealed that only 55 out of 72 studies tested for neurological and cognitive function, and only a subset used standardized tests. Additionally, among the studies that used standardized tests, the cut-off scores used were not always adequate for screening out mild cognitive impairment. An additional secondary aim of this scoping review was to determine the feasibility of whether a meta-analysis could be conducted in the future to further quantitatively evaluate the results (i.e., are the findings obtained from studies using self-reported vision and hearing impairment screening methods significantly different from those measuring vision and hearing impairment in the lab) and to assess the scope of this problem. We found that it may not be feasible to conduct a meta-analysis with the entire dataset of this scoping review. However, a meta-analysis can be conducted if stricter parameters are used (e.g., focusing on accuracy or response time data only).Systematic Review Registration: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/GTUHD.

Highlights

  • The proportion of the world’s population over 60 years of age is estimated to increase to approximately 2 billion individuals by 2050, nearly doubling from 12% of the world population to 22% (World Health Organization, 2018a)

  • 105 articles were selected for full article review and for further evaluation; 35 articles did not meet the inclusion criteria due to reasons spanning from age, lack of relation to audiovisual integration, lack of undergoing the peer review process, or because they were reviews that did not provide sufficient information or provided information that was not relevant to this scoping study

  • We recommend screening for both age-abnormal hearing and vision and using the World Health Organization’s definitions of hearing loss and visual impairment

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Summary

Introduction

The proportion of the world’s population over 60 years of age is estimated to increase to approximately 2 billion individuals by 2050, nearly doubling from 12% of the world population to 22% (World Health Organization, 2018a). That in an epidemiology study conducted by Lin et al (2011) where data related to hearing abilities of older adults aged 70 and over was used from the 2005–2006 cycle of the National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey, it was found that the prevalence of hearing loss varied depending on the tonal frequencies, the audiometric thresholds used to define hearing loss, and whether hearing loss was considered in the better or worse hearing ear They reported hearing loss prevalence rates from 16.5% when hearing loss was defined as using 0.5, 1, and 2 kHz (standard pure tone averages; PTA) with a 40 dB threshold in the better ear to 99.7% when hearing loss was defined as using 3, 4, 6, and 8 kHz (high-frequency PTAs) with a 15 dB threshold in the worse ear. The definition used when measuring hearing loss is crucial especially when some researchers may be utilizing a more rigid inclusion criteria as compared to others

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