Abstract

This paper reviews recent studies that have used adaptive auditory training to address communication problems experienced by some children in their everyday life. It considers the auditory contribution to developmental listening and language problems and the underlying principles of auditory learning that may drive further refinement of auditory learning applications. Following strong claims that language and listening skills in children could be improved by auditory learning, researchers have debated what aspect of training contributed to the improvement and even whether the claimed improvements reflect primarily a retest effect on the skill measures. Key to understanding this research have been more circumscribed studies of the transfer of learning and the use of multiple control groups to examine auditory and non-auditory contributions to the learning. Significant auditory learning can occur during relatively brief periods of training. As children mature, their ability to train improves, but the relation between the duration of training, amount of learning and benefit remains unclear. Individual differences in initial performance and amount of subsequent learning advocate tailoring training to individual learners. The mechanisms of learning remain obscure, especially in children, but it appears that the development of cognitive skills is of at least equal importance to the refinement of sensory processing. Promotion of retention and transfer of learning are major goals for further research.

Highlights

  • We define auditory learning as any measurable improvement in performance of a listening task that is produced by a period of stimulation

  • We have demonstrated (Amitay et al 2006b, 2008) that the performance of auditory tasks may be improved by training with non-auditory stimuli, and users of hearing instruments improve their ability to use those instruments without specific training (e.g. Fryauf-Bertschy et al 1997)

  • HEARING AND LISTENING PROBLEMS IN CHILDREN To examine how auditory learning may remediate developmental hearing and listening problems in children, we consider what is known about the nature of those problems. (a) Hearing and listening Children hear well from an early age

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

We define auditory learning as any measurable improvement in performance of a listening task that is produced by a period of stimulation. This stimulation need not be auditory or involve deliberate, specific training. We have demonstrated (Amitay et al 2006b, 2008) that the performance of auditory tasks may be improved by training with non-auditory stimuli, and users of hearing instruments improve their ability to use those instruments without specific training Performance improvement is usually the greatest on the trained task, but can transfer to other, untrained task or stimulus conditions. We examine here the proposition that the transfer of auditory learning can be used to improve listening and language skills of immediate practical usefulness.

APPLICATIONS OF AUDITORY LEARNING IN CHILDREN
HEARING AND LISTENING PROBLEMS IN CHILDREN
AUDITORY LEARNING IN ADULTS
AUDITORY LEARNING IN CHILDREN
Findings
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
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