Sammanfattning
Purpose: Speech signal degradation such as a voice disorder presented in quiet or in combination with multi-talker babble noise could affect listening comprehension in children with hearing impairment. This study aims to investigate the effects of voice quality and multi-talker babble noise on passage comprehension in children with using cochlear implants (CIs) and/or hearing aids (HAs). It also aims to examine what role executive functioning has for passage comprehension in listening conditions with degraded signals (voice quality and multi-talker babble noise) in children using CI/HA. Methods: Twenty-three children (10 boys and 13 girls; mean age 9 years) using CI and/or HA were tested for passage comprehension in four listening conditions: a typical voice or a (hoarse) dysphonic, voice presented in quiet or in multi-talker babble noise. Results: The results show that the dysphonic voice did not affect passage comprehension in quiet or in noise. Multi-talker babble noise decreased passage comprehension compared to performance in quiet. No interactions with executive function were found. Conclusions: In conclusion, children with CI/HA seem to struggle with comprehension in poor sound environments, which in turn may reduce learning opportunities at school
Originalspråk | Odefinierat/okänt |
---|---|
Sidor (från-till) | 15–23 |
Tidskrift | Logopedics Phoniatrics Vocology |
Volym | 45 |
Nummer | 1 |
DOI | |
Status | Publicerad - 2019 |
MoE-publikationstyp | A1 Tidskriftsartikel-refererad |
Nyckelord
- Executive function
- multi-talker babble noise
- dysphonic voice