Abstract
Objective: To strengthen future methodological choices regarding the measurement of cognition within the field of audiology, the current study aimed to examine the effect of, among other things, hearing sensitivity on the backward corsi tapping task (i.e., visual working memory and processing speed) and the letter-number sequencing task (i.e., verbal working memory and processing speed).Design and Study Sample: The backward corsi tapping task and the letter-number sequencing task were administered to 184 participants, aged between 18 and 69 years. The effect of age, sex, educational level, awakeness, and hearing sensitivity on verbal and visual working memory and processing speed was assessed using stepwise multiple regression analyses.Results: For all outcome variables, a decrease in performance was observed with increasing age. For visual and verbal working memory, males outperformed females, whereas no clear sex effect was observed for visual and verbal processing speed. Hearing sensitivity had only a significant impact on visual processing speed.Conclusion: The importance to evaluate cognitive construct validity within audiological research was highlighted. Further research should focus on investigating the associations between speech understanding on the one hand and the backward corsi tapping task and letter-number sequencing task on the other hand.
Highlights
Hearing can be described as a passive function that requires bottom-up processes in order to detect, localize, and discriminate sounds (Kiessling et al, 2003)
Working memory and processing speed were reported as the most important predictors for speech understanding, especially among hearing-impaired elderly (Vaughan et al, 2006; Dryden et al, 2017). Their contribution during speech understanding has been described within the Ease of Language Understanding (ELU) model (Rönnberg et al, 2013)
The letter-number sequencing task and the backward corsi tapping task are both standardized tests for measuring working memory, though their test design allow to simultaneously measure processing speed as well
Summary
To strengthen future methodological choices regarding the measurement of cognition within the field of audiology, the current study aimed to examine the effect of, among other things, hearing sensitivity on the backward corsi tapping task (i.e., visual working memory and processing speed) and the letter-number sequencing task (i.e., verbal working memory and processing speed). Design and Study Sample: The backward corsi tapping task and the letter-number sequencing task were administered to 184 participants, aged between 18 and 69 years. The effect of age, sex, educational level, awakeness, and hearing sensitivity on verbal and visual working memory and processing speed was assessed using stepwise multiple regression analyses
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have