Abstract

It is now well established that the adult central nervous system can reorganize following various environmental changes. In particular, it has been hypothesized that auditory rehabilitation of sensorineural hearing-impaired adults may involve functional plasticity. The present study sought to compare intensity-related performance between two groups of subjects paired for age, gender and absolute thresholds in both ears. One group comprised long-term binaural hearing aid (HA) users and the other non-HA users. The effect of HA use was measured in two intensity tasks, a discrimination-limen-for-intensity task (DLI) and a loudness-scaling task. Results indicated that significant differences exist in loudness perception between long-term HA users and non-HA users, the latter rating intensity as louder than the former. Concerning intensity discrimination performance, a statistical tendency to lower, i.e. better, DLIs in long-term than in non-HA users was revealed. Moreover, significant differences between ears were observed in the loudness-scaling task, with the right ear showing greater inter-group difference than the left ear. This additional result points to a lateralization of the acclimatization effect. Finally, this study suggests significant perceptual modification and thus a possible functional plasticity entailed by HA use.

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