2017
DOI: 10.1007/s10433-017-0410-y
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Age-related changes in auditory processing and speech perception: cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses

Abstract: Age-related differences in speech perception have been shown in previous cross-sectional studies to be related to auditory temporal processing. We examined this association in both cross-sectional and longitudinal designs, controlling for age-related changes in hearing sensitivity and cognitive ability. Fifty-eight participants were tested in two phases. In phase 1, ages ranged between 22 and 82 years. Phase 2 occurred seven years later. In both phases, participants performed auditory processing tasks, speech … Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…First, since the human brain is highly plastic throughout the life span, by aging, the auditory processing changes due to the temporal coding of the auditory cortex (Bones & Plack, 2015; Babkoff & Fostick, 2017). Temporal coding is the ability of the brain to encode sensory information to the action potentials that relies on precise timing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, since the human brain is highly plastic throughout the life span, by aging, the auditory processing changes due to the temporal coding of the auditory cortex (Bones & Plack, 2015; Babkoff & Fostick, 2017). Temporal coding is the ability of the brain to encode sensory information to the action potentials that relies on precise timing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(3) with background white noise (WN) consisting of wide-band noise evenly distributed over the entire range of frequencies (0.25-8 kHz); and (4) compressed speech at a 60% compression rate. A compression rate of 60% was chosen since it was found previously to be sensitive to age-related difficulty in speech perception (e.g., Babkoff and Fostick 2017;Fostick et al , 2014. The words were compressed to be 60% of their original length and presented with no background noise.…”
Section: Speech Perceptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It reflects the ability to perceive the temporal order of (at least two) stimuli presented in rapid succession; the subject’s task is to indicate their temporal order – i.e., identify a before-after relation. The correctness of such judgments reflects temporal acuity, necessary for the identification of incoming events in analytical, sequential information processing (von Steinbüchel et al, 1999; Szymaszek et al, 2009; Szelag et al, 2011; Babkoff and Fostick, 2013, 2017; Fostick and Babkoff, 2013a). Accordingly, it has been postulated that patterning in a time window of some tens of milliseconds is controlled by a neural mechanism characterized by time limits of approximately 30 ms (Pöppel, 1994, 1997).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%