Imagine that someday, children with hearing loss can prepare for an upcoming school year by playing computer games with their new teacher's voice throughout the summer. Then, on the first day of class, children would have that ?Oprah Winfrey effect?, the sense that they know the teacher. Children would be able to recognize their teacher's voice much better than they would have otherwise, and importantly, they would experience less anxiety because of the talker familiarity effect. clEAR is making that ?someday? a reality today. clEAR has created a new web-based clinical tool for audiologists and teachers to provide customized auditory brain training to their patients (www.clearforears.com). Auditory brain training includes traditional analytic and synthetic training as well as training to develop those auditory cognitive skills that are necessary to decode spoken language regardless of the content (i.e., auditory working memory, auditory attention, and auditory processing speed). The centerpiece of the clEAR website is a set of auditory brain training games that patients play, with oversight and coaching from their hearing healthcare provider or from one of clEAR's in- house audiologists. Currently, clEAR caters to adult patients, and the games require some reading ability and a vocabulary that includes the most common words of the English language (N=800 words). clEAR has been enrolling paying adult subscribers since May of 2017. In the laboratory, we are testing a research version of pediatric games. The pediatric games are ?child- friendly? and require only a limited vocabulary and no reading skills. In this Phase 1, we will first conduct focus groups with 10 children who have undergone training with the research version of clEAR's pediatric games, then we will recode the games from LabView to Java Script, making changes in the games in response to the focus group comments, and finally, we will collect data from 20 children to assess whether web-based auditory brain training improves their abilities to recognize the speech of their (hypothetical) upcoming school year's classroom teacher. The experimental design will be a within-subjects A1-A2-B1-B2 design, where children will serve as their own controls. They will be tested two times before training with a one-week interval separating the test sessions (A1 and A2), to establish a baseline performance, and then immediately after training (B1) to establish immediate gains and three weeks later to assess whether gains begin to decline following training (B2). All testing and training will occur during the summer so the experimental results will not be confounded by benefits possibly accrued through school-related activities. Children will complete a total of 16 hours of training and will follow the same schedule (i.e., play the games in a prescribed order and for a set amount of time each). Outcome measures will come from a comprehensive speech perception test battery, questionnaires, and from data collected during training and stored on the children's training tablets. In Phase II, we will transfer the pediatric games to the clEAR website and develop their commercial potential.

Public Health Relevance

clEAR?s auditory brain training has been shown to be effective in improving childrens? abilities to recognize the speech of generic talkers in a laboratory setting. In the proposed research, we will build upon these results and assess the extent to which auditory brain training delivered via the web enhances children?s abilities to recognize the speech of a potential classroom teacher and diminishes their communication challenges that are associated with significant hearing loss. First, we will conduct focus groups with children who have undergone training with the research version of clEAR?s pediatric games, then we will recode the games from LabView to Java Script, making changes in the games in response to the focus group comments, and finally, we will collect data from 20 children to assess whether web-based auditory brain training improves their abilities to recognize the speech of their (hypothetical) upcoming school year?s classroom teacher.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase I (R43)
Project #
1R43DC018247-01
Application #
9844156
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1)
Program Officer
Miller, Roger
Project Start
2019-08-19
Project End
2020-07-31
Budget Start
2019-08-19
Budget End
2020-07-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Customized Learning Exercise for Aural Rehabilitation, LLC
Department
Type
DUNS #
080185073
City
Saint Louis
State
MO
Country
United States
Zip Code
63124