Abstract

Older adults often present difficulties understanding speech that cannot be explained by age-related changes in sound audibility. Psychoacoustic and electrophysiologic studies have linked these suprathreshold difficulties to age-related deficits in the auditory processing of temporal and spectral sound information. These studies suggest the existence of an age-related temporal processing deficit in the central auditory system, but the existence of such deficit in the spectral domain remains understudied. The FFR is an electrophysiological evoked response that assesses the ability of the neural auditory system to reproduce the spectral and temporal patterns of a sound. The main goal of this short review is to investigate if the FFR can identify and measure spectral processing deficits in the elderly compared to younger adults (for both, without hearing loss or competing noise). Furthermore, we want to determine what stimuli and analyses have been used in the literature to assess the neural encoding of spectral cues in older adults. Almost all reviewed articles showed an age-related decline in the auditory processing of spectral acoustic information. Even when using different speech and non-speech stimuli, studies reported an age-related decline at the fundamental frequency, at the first formant, and at other harmonic components using different metrics, such as the response's amplitude, inter-trial phase coherence, signal-to-response correlation, and signal-to-noise ratio. These results suggest that older adults may present age-related spectral processing difficulties, but further FFR studies are needed to clarify the effect of advancing age on the neural encoding of spectral speech cues. Spectral processing research on aging would benefit from using a broader variety of stimuli and from rigorously controlling for hearing thresholds even in the absence of disabling hearing loss. Advances in the understanding of the effect of age on FFR measures of spectral encoding could lead to the development of new clinical tools, with possible applications in the field of hearing aid fitting.

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