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Quantifying the Impact of Auditory Deafferentation on Speech Perception.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Liu, J; Stohl, J; Lopez-Poveda, EA; Overath, T
Published in: Trends in hearing
January 2024

The past decade has seen a wealth of research dedicated to determining which and how morphological changes in the auditory periphery contribute to people experiencing hearing difficulties in noise despite having clinically normal audiometric thresholds in quiet. Evidence from animal studies suggests that cochlear synaptopathy in the inner ear might lead to auditory nerve deafferentation, resulting in impoverished signal transmission to the brain. Here, we quantify the likely perceptual consequences of auditory deafferentation in humans via a physiologically inspired encoding-decoding model. The encoding stage simulates the processing of an acoustic input stimulus (e.g., speech) at the auditory periphery, while the decoding stage is trained to optimally regenerate the input stimulus from the simulated auditory nerve firing data. This allowed us to quantify the effect of different degrees of auditory deafferentation by measuring the extent to which the decoded signal supported the identification of speech in quiet and in noise. In a series of experiments, speech perception thresholds in quiet and in noise increased (worsened) significantly as a function of the degree of auditory deafferentation for modeled deafferentation greater than 90%. Importantly, this effect was significantly stronger in a noisy than in a quiet background. The encoding-decoding model thus captured the hallmark symptom of degraded speech perception in noise together with normal speech perception in quiet. As such, the model might function as a quantitative guide to evaluating the degree of auditory deafferentation in human listeners.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

Trends in hearing

DOI

EISSN

2331-2165

ISSN

2331-2165

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

28

Start / End Page

23312165241227818

Related Subject Headings

  • Speech Perception
  • Noise
  • Humans
  • Hearing Loss
  • Auditory Threshold
  • Auditory Perception
  • Animals
  • Acoustic Stimulation
  • 4201 Allied health and rehabilitation science
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

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Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Liu, J., Stohl, J., Lopez-Poveda, E. A., & Overath, T. (2024). Quantifying the Impact of Auditory Deafferentation on Speech Perception. Trends in Hearing, 28, 23312165241227816. https://doi.org/10.1177/23312165241227818
Liu, Jiayue, Joshua Stohl, Enrique A. Lopez-Poveda, and Tobias Overath. “Quantifying the Impact of Auditory Deafferentation on Speech Perception.Trends in Hearing 28 (January 2024): 23312165241227816. https://doi.org/10.1177/23312165241227818.
Liu J, Stohl J, Lopez-Poveda EA, Overath T. Quantifying the Impact of Auditory Deafferentation on Speech Perception. Trends in hearing. 2024 Jan;28:23312165241227816.
Liu, Jiayue, et al. “Quantifying the Impact of Auditory Deafferentation on Speech Perception.Trends in Hearing, vol. 28, Jan. 2024, p. 23312165241227816. Epmc, doi:10.1177/23312165241227818.
Liu J, Stohl J, Lopez-Poveda EA, Overath T. Quantifying the Impact of Auditory Deafferentation on Speech Perception. Trends in hearing. 2024 Jan;28:23312165241227816.

Published In

Trends in hearing

DOI

EISSN

2331-2165

ISSN

2331-2165

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

28

Start / End Page

23312165241227818

Related Subject Headings

  • Speech Perception
  • Noise
  • Humans
  • Hearing Loss
  • Auditory Threshold
  • Auditory Perception
  • Animals
  • Acoustic Stimulation
  • 4201 Allied health and rehabilitation science
  • 3202 Clinical sciences