Abstract

This study examined the effect of auditory-visual (AV) speech stimuli on working memory in older adults with poorer-hearing (PH) in comparison to age- and education-matched older adults with better hearing (BH). Participants completed a working memory n-back task (0- to 2-back) in which sequences of digits were presented in visual-only (i.e., speech-reading), auditory-only (A-only), and AV conditions. Auditory event-related potentials (ERP) were collected to assess the relationship between perceptual and working memory processing. The behavioral results showed that both groups were faster in the AV condition in comparison to the unisensory conditions. The ERP data showed perceptual facilitation in the AV condition, in the form of reduced amplitudes and latencies of the auditory N1 and/or P1 components, in the PH group. Furthermore, a working memory ERP component, the P3, peaked earlier for both groups in the AV condition compared to the A-only condition. In general, the PH group showed a more robust AV benefit; however, the BH group showed a dose-response relationship between perceptual facilitation and working memory improvement, especially for facilitation of processing speed. Two measures, reaction time and P3 amplitude, suggested that the presence of visual speech cues may have helped the PH group to counteract the demanding auditory processing, to the level that no group differences were evident during the AV modality despite lower performance during the A-only condition. Overall, this study provides support for the theory of an integrated perceptual-cognitive system. The practical significance of these findings is also discussed.

Highlights

  • Aging is associated with various physical and cognitive changes, including both structural and functional changes in the auditory system resulting in hearing difficulty

  • The analysis revealed a significant main effect of modality [F(2, 60) = 9.7; mean square error (MSE) = 48.22; p < 0.001; ε = 0.86; ηp2 = 0.25], indicating that participants were more accurate in the A-only and AV conditions compared to the V-only condition but performance in the A-only and the AV condition did not differ

  • We examined whether there is a relationship between the amount of perceptual facilitation and the level of behavioral improvement on the working memory (WM) task in the AV condition compared to the A-only condition

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Summary

Introduction

Aging is associated with various physical and cognitive changes, including both structural and functional changes in the auditory system resulting in hearing difficulty. The most common cause of hearing impairment in older adults results from various structural and functional age-related changes in the cochlea (Schneider, 1997). In addition to elevated hearing thresholds, these changes affect the processing of temporal and spectral cues, which are important for speech perception (e.g., Baer and Moore, 1994; Schneider, 1997; Schneider and Pichora-Fuller, 2001; Pichora-Fuller et al, 2007). Age-related changes in the auditory system can have a negative effect on speech perception, making it more effortful, and resource demanding

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