Our broad, long-term objective is to understand the neural mechanisms underlying age-related changes in the perception of speech in noise. To this end, it is necessary that audiological, psychoacoustical, and neurophysiological performance data in human subjects be obtained. These will contribute to our understanding of the psychophysical and neurological bases of age-related changes in speech perception in noise and the appropriateness of various species as animal models of presbycusis. In this project, 152 male and female subjects will be recruited to form four groups: young adults with normal audiometric hearing, aging adults with normal audiometric hearing, young adults with mild losses, and aging adults with mild losses. Each subject will participate in three series of experiments which will examine their performance on audiological, psychoacoustical, and neurophysiological measures. First, age-related changes on measures of speech reception in noise and other audiological tests will be determined. Second, temporal and frequency resolution will be measured psychoacoustically. Third, temporal resolution and frequency resolution will be measured neurophysiologically. All experiments will be conducted both in quiet and in a broadband masking noise. High-pass masking noise, will be used to investigate whether differences in performance between young and aging groups is due, in part, to unmatched high-frequency thresholds. The rationale for all of these experiments is to correlate age-related changes in speech perception in noise and audiological measures with age-related changes in the perception and processing of other complex signals which presumably underlie speech perception in noise. Completion by these same subjects of the same or similar experiments in the startle inhibition paradigms of Project 2 provides linkage between Projects 1 and 3. Completion of these same experiments by animals in Project 3 will allow for testing of C57B1/6J and CBA/J mice and the Fischer 344 rat as appropriate animal models for presbycusis. Audiological, including speech perception in noise, experiments, will take about 5 hours/subject, psychoacoustic experiments about 20 hours/subject, and neurophysiological experiments, 10 hours/subject for a total of 35 hours/subject. Each subject will be seen for approximately 3 hours/week for a total of 35 hours/subject. Each subject will be seen for approximately 3 hours/week for a total of 12 weeks. Ten subjects can be accommodated in one 12 week block and data will be collected for three 12 week blocks during each year for a grand total of approximately 30 subjects each year. Underlying relationships between audiological tests, speech perception in noise and psychoacoustical and neurophysiological measures of temporal and frequency resolution will be quantified using correlational and multivariate techniques.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
5P01AG009524-05
Application #
5204700
Study Section
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
1996
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Eddins, Ann Clock; Ozmeral, Erol J; Eddins, David A (2018) How aging impacts the encoding of binaural cues and the perception of auditory space. Hear Res 369:79-89
Hoover, Eric C; Eddins, Ann C; Eddins, David A (2018) Distribution of spectral modulation transfer functions in a young, normal-hearing population. J Acoust Soc Am 143:306
Eddins, Ann Clock; Eddins, David A (2018) Cortical Correlates of Binaural Temporal Processing Deficits in Older Adults. Ear Hear 39:594-604
Ozmeral, Erol J; Eddins, Ann C; Eddins, David A (2018) How Do Age and Hearing Loss Impact Spectral Envelope Perception? J Speech Lang Hear Res 61:2376-2385
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Bazard, Parveen; Frisina, Robert D; Walton, Joseph P et al. (2017) Nanoparticle-based Plasmonic Transduction for Modulation of Electrically Excitable Cells. Sci Rep 7:7803
Watson, Nathan; Ding, Bo; Zhu, Xiaoxia et al. (2017) Chronic inflammation - inflammaging - in the ageing cochlea: A novel target for future presbycusis therapy. Ageing Res Rev 40:142-148
Brecht, Elliott J; Barsz, Kathy; Gross, Benjamin et al. (2017) Increasing GABA reverses age-related alterations in excitatory receptive fields and intensity coding of auditory midbrain neurons in aged mice. Neurobiol Aging 56:87-99
Halonen, Joshua; Hinton, Ashley S; Frisina, Robert D et al. (2016) Long-term treatment with aldosterone slows the progression of age-related hearing loss. Hear Res 336:63-71

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