Abstract
Improvements in digital amplification, cochlear implants, and other innovations have extended the potential for improving hearing function; yet, there remains a need for further hearing improvement in challenging listening situations, such as when trying to understand speech in noise or when listening to music. Here, we review evidence from animal and human models of plasticity in the brain’s ability to process speech and other meaningful stimuli. We considered studies targeting populations of younger through older adults, emphasizing studies that have employed randomized controlled designs and have made connections between neural and behavioral changes. Overall results indicate that the brain remains malleable through older adulthood, provided that treatment algorithms have been modified to allow for changes in learning with age. Improvements in speech-in-noise perception and cognition function accompany neural changes in auditory processing. The training-related improvements noted across studies support the need to consider auditory training strategies in the management of individuals who express concerns about hearing in difficult listening situations. Given evidence from studies engaging the brain’s reward centers, future research should consider how these centers can be naturally activated during training.
Introduction
Hearing aid satisfaction has significantly improved in the last decade, largely because of improvements in hearing aid algorithms, which now provide better signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) and better comfort (Hawkins & Yacullo, 1984; Kochkin, 2010; Valente, Fabry, & Potts, 1995). Nevertheless, even with the best technology, hearing aid users encounter difficulty when trying to understand a conversation in noise. In fact, some hearing aid wearers will remove one hearing aid to “to hear better in noise,” despite the demonstrated advantages of binaural hearing for listening in noise (as reviewed in Holmes, 2003). Similarly, although many individuals achieve excellent open-set word recognition through cochlear implants in quiet environments, they continue to struggle in difficult listening environments. There has been greater recognition of the roles of central processing and cognition in the ability to communicate with others and awareness that amplification and implantation provide audibility but may not improve sound processing ability. For these reasons, increased attention has focused on the efficacy of providing auditory training to individuals with hearing difficulties.
In this review, we first summarize effects of aging and hearing loss on physiological central processing of speech in both animal and human models. These biological mechanisms may underlie speech-in-noise perception difficulties in older adults, and they support the need to consider auditory training when developing treatment plans. We then consider studies that have demonstrated plasticity through both long- and short-term training in animal and human models. Examples of plasticity from long-term life experiences include language exposure and musical training. Short-term laboratory-based experiments in humans have demonstrated principles of auditory plasticity, such as stimulus-specific learning and generalized effects of training. We then review software-based auditory training strategies that have demonstrated benefits for real-world communication in both young and older adults. Finally, the implications of these studies are discussed in terms of optimal training strategies and future research questions.
Effects of Aging
Older adults experience greater difficulty hearing in background noise than do younger adults (Gordon-Salant, 2005; Souza, Boike, Witherell, & Tremblay, 2007), and these differences cannot be explained solely by reduced audibility (Hargus & Gordon-Salant, 1995; Souza et al., 2007). Animal and human models of the aging auditory system support the theory that slower neural processing accompanies aging. Several mechanisms may contribute to this slowing, including prolonged neural refractory times (Parthasarathy & Bartlett, 2011; Recanzone, Engle, & Juarez-Salinas, 2011; Walton, Frisina, & O’Neill, 1998), loss of myelin integrity (Lu et al., 2011), decreased brain connectivity (Forstmann et al., 2011), and increased variability in neural firing (Anderson, Parbery-Clark, White-Schwoch, & Kraus, 2012; Clinard & Tremblay, in press; MacDonald, Nyberg, & Bäckman, 2006; Turner, Hughes, & Caspary, 2005; Wang, Wu, Li, & Schneider, 2011; Yang, Liang, Li, Wang, & Zhou, 2009). Precise subcortical timing is an important factor in the ability to understand speech in noise (Anderson, Skoe, Chandrasekaran, & Kraus, 2010), and accurate encoding of both temporal and spectral aspects of speech is crucial for identification of the target speaker in a background of other talkers (as reviewed in Shinn-Cunningham & Best, 2008). Therefore, deficits in spectrotemporal processing may cause the older adult to experience difficulties when listening to speech in noise (Harkrider, Plyler, & Hedrick, 2005; Tremblay, Piskosz, & Souza, 2003).
Because peripheral hearing loss often accompanies advanced age, especially in the higher frequencies, it is difficult to rule out the influence of hearing loss on perceptual or physiological central processing, even in well-controlled studies (Anderson et al., 2012). A recent meta-analysis undertaken by the American Academy of Audiology Task Force on Central Presbycusis concluded that there is little evidence to support the existence of perceptual declines in central auditory function that are independent of hearing loss or cognitive function (Humes et al., 2012). Moreover, cognitive deficits can exacerbate slight declines in hearing sensitivity, thus further contributing to the older adult’s speech-in-noise perception deficits (Pichora-Fuller, 2003). Despite these findings, there is evidence supporting the remediation of central auditory processing and cognitive deficits; these studies will be addressed below.
Effects of Hearing Loss
Although technology has improved the ability to provide increased audibility and better SNRs (Hawkins & Yacullo, 1984; Valente et al., 1995), individuals with hearing loss continue to struggle when listening in difficult environments. These difficulties may arise from consequences of hearing loss on physiological central processing, including increased excitability (Kotak et al., 2005), decreased inhibition (Dong, Rodger, Mulders, & Robertson, 2010), tonotopic reorganization (Thai-Van, Veuillet, Norena, Guiraud, & Collet, 2010), and a disrupted balance of speech cues (Henry & Heinz, 2012; Kale & Heinz, 2010). These neural changes may have repercussions for speech understanding.
Two components of speech—the envelope and temporal fine structure—may provide a framework for understanding the hearing impaired individual’s perceptual difficulties. The envelope represents the slowly modulating aspect of speech, and the temporal fine structure (TFS) refers to the rapidly modulating aspect of the signal that carries the envelope. Envelope cues are adequate for hearing in quiet situations, but TFS cues appear to be important for understanding speech in noise (Lorenzi, Gilbert, Carn, Garnier, & Moore, 2006; Rubinstein, 2004; Shannon, 2007). In an animal model, Heinz and colleagues have determined that VIII nerve coding of the envelope is enhanced with hearing loss (Kale & Heinz, 2010), while the coding of the TFS is unchanged in quiet but decreased in noise (Henry & Heinz, 2012). These effects suggest that a disruption in the balance of envelope and TFS may contribute to the hearing-impaired listener’s hearing difficulties—increased envelope encoding may result from “turning up the energy of the auditory signal,” possibly from efferent activation of a central gain mechanism (Munro & Blount, 2009). However, this increased envelope gain may make the TFS less salient, especially in noise. Hearing aids increase volume; even with compression, they will likely increase envelope coding, which may be counterproductive for the individual with hearing loss—especially in louder environments, such as crowded restaurants or large family gatherings.
Combined Effects of Aging and Hearing Loss
Both younger and older individuals with hearing loss experience pronounced decreases in understanding of syntactically complex sentences, but older hearing-impaired adults experience the greatest losses in understanding (Wingfield, McCoy, Peelle, Tun, & Cox, 2006). Furthermore, the effects of speech rate are greater for participants with hearing impairment than for participants with normal hearing, suggesting that effortful hearing drains them of needed additional resources as the processing load is increased. Younger and older listeners with hearing loss experience only small decreases in understanding of syntactically easy sentences, and only at higher speech rates. For both complex and simple sentence structures, aging has a smaller effect than hearing loss and can be seen only at the higher speech rates, consistent with previously noted temporal processing declines in older adults (Anderson et al., 2012; Gordon-Salant, Fitzgibbons, & Friedman, 2007; Tremblay et al., 2003).
Therefore, management of older individuals’ hearing loss must consider strategies to compensate for deficits that emerge with high processing or cognitive loads. Waning cognitive ability can exacerbate slight declines in hearing sensitivity and contribute to the older adult’s speech-in-noise perception deficits (Pichora-Fuller, 2003), suggesting that cognitive training may also benefit speech-in-noise perception. These aspects of training will be considered below.
Auditory Training
Long-Term Plasticity
Language Experience
The plasticity of the auditory system (i.e., changes in brainstem or cortical processing) is evident in studies demonstrating the modulating influences of life experiences, specifically language and musical experience. For example, tonal-language speakers have enhanced brainstem encoding of linguistically relevant pitch contours relative to non-native tonal-language speakers who have not been exposed to these contours in a linguistic context (Krishnan, Xu, Gandour, & Cariani, 2005). This tonal-language speaker advantage was also found for pitch representation in severely degraded stimuli, with greater pitch strength for rapid changes of pitch (Krishnan, Bidelman, & Gandour, 2010). Krishnan and colleagues suggest that language experiences sharpen the tuning properties of neurons engaged in processing pitch contours, even in noise, enabling the listener to extract meaning from communication in suboptimal environments. It has also been demonstrated that this enhanced pitch processing develops over time; in a comparison of pitch processing in infant and adult English and Mandarin Chinese speakers, only the adult Chinese speakers demonstrated pitch enhancement—it was not present in the brainstem responses of infant Chinese speakers or English speakers (Jeng et al., 2011).
Similarly, bilingual language speakers have greater brainstem encoding of the fundamental frequency (F0) compared to monolingual speakers for stimuli presented both in quiet and in noise, with this advantage present as early as adolescence (Krizman, Marian, Shook, Skoe, & Kraus, 2012; Figure 1). The strength of F0 encoding in this study was related to a measure of auditory attention in the bilingual children, suggesting that the enhancement may be driven by afferent enhancements from immersion in a linguistically rich environment, combined with top-down executive function control as the bilingual speaker attends to specific features of the two languages. Evidence of enhanced neural function can also be found in older bilingual adults (Luk, Bialystok, Craik, & Grady, 2011), for whom diffusion tensor imaging revealed higher white matter integrity than in older monolingual adults. The enhanced white matter integrity, measured by fractional anisotropy, was found in the corpus callosum extending to the inferior longitudinal fasciculi. Furthermore, a resting-state functional connectivity analysis showed that bilinguals had stronger anterior to posterior functional activity compared to monolinguals.
Musical Experience
Musical experience appears to have a powerful influence on auditory skill development. Musicians are not only better tuned to music, but they also appear to have an advantage for processing speech. The benefits of musical training for speech processing might be understood from a framework proposed by Ani Patel (2011), termed the OPERA hypothesis. Patel suggests that music is an important contributor to auditory learning for the following reasons: there is overlap in the anatomical pathways or brain networks that process speech and music components, the precision required for music processing is greater than that of speech, the emotion elicited in performing music induces plasticity, the repetition involved in extensive practice of a musical instrument tunes the auditory system, and attention is necessary for focusing on the details of musical sounds.
The factors listed in the OPERA hypothesis may lead to enhanced neural encoding of speech and music. This enhancement can occur even in infancy: infants who participated in “active engagement” music classes for 6 months had larger and earlier cortical responses to a piano note compared to infants who participated in “passive” music classes (Trainor, Marie, Gerry, Whiskin, & Unrau, 2012). School-age children who have consistently practiced a musical instrument for at least 5 years not only have better scores on the Hearing in Noise Test (HINT; Nilsson, Soli, & Sullivan, 1994), but also have brainstem responses to speech that are more resistant to the degradative effects of noise than nonmusicians (Strait, Parbery-Clark, Hittner, & Kraus, 2012). This resistance to noise degradation in the brainstem has also been found in young adult musicians (Bidelman & Krishnan, 2010; Parbery-Clark, Skoe, & Kraus, 2009). Older normal-hearing musicians have faster brainstem timing and greater representation of the harmonics of a speech syllable compared to age-matched peers (Parbery-Clark, Anderson, Hittner, & Kraus, 2012b), and the expected age-related delays in subcortical timing (Anderson et al., 2012) are offset in middle-aged musicians (Parbery-Clark, Anderson, Hittner, & Kraus, 2012a; Figure 2). Musicians’ enhanced neural processing has also been found in cortical responses to speech: young adult musicians have earlier cortical latencies than nonmusicians, and these measures, along with brainstem onset timing and harmonic representation, are correlated with the age of onset of musical training and years of practice (Musacchia, Strait, & Kraus, 2008). A neural correlate of superior concurrent stream segregation (a necessary component of speech-in-noise perception) is found in cortical responses of musicians compared to nonmusicians (Zendel & Alain, 2012). Musicians also demonstrate cross-domain effects—that is, musicians who are non–tonal-language speakers experience similar enhancements in brainstem pitch tracking as those observed in native tonal-language speakers in comparison to nonmusician, non–tonal-language speakers (Bidelman, Gandour, & Krishnan, 2009; Wong, Skoe, Russo, Dees, & Kraus, 2007).
Importantly, musicians also exhibit superior listening skills in noise and in related cognitive skills. Given the nature of musical training, and the complexity of listening in noise, this makes sense. After all, memory ability has an important role in speech-in-noise perception: as perception becomes degraded, individuals rely on cognitive resources such as memory to fill in gaps of missing information (Pichora-Fuller, Schneider, & Daneman, 1995). Musical training appears to offset age-related declines both in speech-in-noise perception and in working memory in middle-aged adults, and working memory also relates to speech-in-noise perception in middle-aged to older adults (Parbery-Clark, Strait, Anderson, Hittner, & Kraus, 2011), children (Strait et al., 2012), and young adults (Parbery-Clark, Skoe, Lam, & Kraus, 2009). These benefits appear to be specific to music training and are not seen in other forms of training such as art instruction (Moreno et al., 2011).
To understand the neural mechanisms underlying better memory in musicians, Gaab and Shlaug (2003) compared cortical activation in musicians and nonmusicians, who were matched on pitch memory ability, using a sparse temporal sampling fMRI method to ensure that the clustered volume MR acquisition time (2.75 ms) was separated from the actual auditory task, with high-resolution scanning (1 mm3). They found that musicians had greater activation of auditory storage sites (i.e., superior parietal lobe, supramarginal gyrus, and inferior frontal gyrus) than nonmusicians, who more heavily recruited sensory areas in the primary and secondary auditory cortices. Nonmusicians appear to rely on brain regions that are important for pitch discrimination, focusing on the perceptual component of the task, whereas musicians use brain regions specialized for short-term memory or recall, presumably because the perceptual component does not require as much effort as it does in nonmusicians.
These results demonstrate that consistent musical practice results in auditory advantages for normal-hearing individuals across all age groups, but there is also evidence for benefits from the type of less-intense musical training that many children and teenagers typically participate in during elementary and high school years, even after music training stops. The brainstem frequency following response (FFR) is smaller in amplitude for normal-hearing young adults who have never had musical training compared to those who have had even a few years of training in childhood (Skoe & Kraus, 2012), consistent with animal data showing the impact of childhood experiences of enriched or restricted environments on the adult’s brain (Engineer et al., 2004; Yu, Sanes, Aristizabal, Wadghiri, & Turnbull, 2007). Furthermore, the robustness of brainstem encoding in the musical training groups related to the number of years since music lessons were discontinued (Figure 3). There is also evidence from structural equation modeling that suggests that though cognitive resources (memory, attention) contribute significantly to speech-in-noise perception in all older adults (hearing levels ranging from normal to moderate hearing loss), cognition accounts for more of the variance in older adults who took music lessons in childhood. On the other hand, life experiences (based on socioeconomic status and physical activity) account for more of the variance in those with no musical training (Anderson, White-Schwoch, Parbery-Clark, & Kraus, 2013).
Short-Term Plasticity
Musical Training for Rehabilitation
Though there is robust evidence that long-term plasticity from linguistic or musical experience engenders auditory benefits, long-term training is not a viable option in the clinic. Therefore, short-term training strategies must be developed. There may be benefits of starting musical training later in life. Older adults, ages 60–85 years, with no previous musical experience who participated in a music education program involving 30-minute weekly piano lessons and at least 3 weekly hours of practice had better speed of processing and memory after just 3 months, while a control group showed no changes (Bugos, Perlstein, McCrae, Brophy, & Bedenbaugh, 2007). In another study, recent musical experience predicted visuospatial skills, even in individuals with low education, suggesting that musical training may serve as a buffer against impoverished early education influences on cognitive function (Hanna-Pladdy & Gajewski, 2012).
Future work should consider musical training as a remediation tool for older adults and individuals of all ages with hearing loss. There has been increased interest in using music as a training tool for improving music perception in cochlear implant users (Driscoll, Oleson, Jiang, & Gfeller, 2009; Fu & Galvin, 2007; Galvin, Fu, & Shannon, 2009; Gfeller et al., 2007; Limb & Rubinstein, 2012). Given the converging results of musician studies, one might expect that benefits of musical training would transfer to speech perception in this population.
Animal Models
Several investigators have used animals as models of the neural mechanisms underlying auditory plasticity. For example, a ferret model has been used to demonstrate auditory plasticity in primary auditory cortex using a task requiring signal detection in noise (Atiani, Elhilali, David, Fritz, & Shamma, 2009). Spectrotemporal receptive fields (STRFs) in a passive state were compared to STRFs in an active task (trained to lick water only when the target tone was presented to avoid a mild shock). Greater STRF gain was noted in cells close to the target tone’s best frequency at high SNRs, but at low SNRs, there was suppression of cells both near and far from the target tone on the tonotopic map. Importantly, the ferrets’ behavioral performance correlated with the task, in that STRF changes were greatest when the ferrets’ performance was the highest. A functional connection between the prefrontal cortex and the auditory cortex appears to mediate this plasticity (Fritz, Elhilali, David, & Shamma, 2007). This kind of top-down modulation has also been established in a model of auditory learning. In an auditory localization study, ferrets were able to relearn to localize sound when a temporary earplug was placed in one ear to alter spatial cues. This ability to adapt to altered inputs was lost, however, when the corticocollicular (i.e., auditory cortex to inferior colliculus) connection was eliminated (Bajo, Nodal, Moore, & King, 2010), demonstrating that the corticollicular pathway is critical for the ability to relocalize sound inputs.
Given that older adults represent a large percentage of people in need of hearing rehabilitative services, it is important to demonstrate that auditory plasticity can be achieved in older animals and humans. In another study of auditory relocalization, in young owls, the neurophysiological map for interaural time differences (ITD) adjusted to accommodate a distorted visual input from the use of prisms (Brainard & Knudsen, 1998). In contrast, the ITD maps in older owls did not change, suggesting a sensitivity period for ITD map plasticity. A follow-up study, however, determined that older owls were able to recalibrate their ITD maps when the visual field was displaced in increments, and they retained this learning for 60 days (Linkenhoker & Knudsen, 2002). Another demonstration of plasticity in an animal model was performed with older rats who underwent frequency discrimination (de Villers-Sidani et al., 2010). Before the training, neural firing in the older rat auditory cortex was asynchronous, especially at higher rates of stimulation, compared to neural firing in the younger rat. After training, however, neural synchrony in the auditory cortex increased significantly in the older rats, although they did not achieve the behavioral performance of younger rats. The improvements in neural synchrony were accompanied by an increase in the levels of inhibitory neurotransmitters, suggesting that a training-induced increase in inhibition led to better temporal resolution. A role for inhibitory neurotransmission in temporal resolution has also been suggested by Caspary Ling, Turner, and Hughes (2008), who have posited that age-related decreases in inhibitory neurotransmission are responsible for reduced precision in neural timing in older animals.
Animal models have also been used to assess plasticity for clinical impairments. For example, vagus nerve stimulation has been paired with tone presentation to treat tinnitus in noise-exposed rats (Engineer et al., 2011). Vagus nerve stimulation promotes plasticity by increasing the release of neurotransmitters (Dorr & Debonnel, 2006). The rats were evaluated behaviorally on a gap-detection paradigm to test for the presence of subjective tinnitus prior to and after noise exposure and after the vagus nerve–tone stimulation treatment. These rats were simultaneously tested neurophysiologically by calculating the percentage of auditory cortex neurons firing at different frequencies and intensities to generate tonotopic maps. This treatment not only resulted in a reduction or elimination of the behavioral percept of tinnitus, but also tonotopic maps depicted more normal neural firing in the auditory cortex, so that there was no longer excessive neural firing in the high-frequency range corresponding to the tinnitus. Kilgard and colleagues suggest that these findings have ramifications for treatment of other forms of pathological plasticity, such as chronic pain or phantom limb syndrome (as reviewed in Kilgard, 2012).
Human Laboratory Models
In humans, there is evidence that perceptual learning is accompanied by neural plasticity in the auditory brainstem and cortex. In another example of the inferior colliculus’s role in auditory learning, young adult non–tonal-language speakers who were trained to recognize vocabulary items containing a linguistically relevant dipping vowel contour had better brainstem tracking of these vowel contours after training (Song, Banai, & Kraus, 2008; Figure 4). Furthermore, changes in training-induced behavioral performance relate to changes in F0 representation in the FFR, suggesting that changes in FFR strength, arising largely from the inferior colliculus, may be a mechanism for perceptual learning of pitch discrimination (Carcagno & Plack, 2011). This mechanism is also supported by the results of Chandrasekaran, Kraus, and Wong (2012), who trained participants to distinguish words in a novel language based on pitch differences. They found that that increased inferior colliculus representation of pitch patterns (demonstrated through fMRI and FFR data) was associated with more successful word learning.
Training effects can also be found in cortical evoked responses. After training on novel consonant perception, changes can be found in the mismatch negativity response (Kraus et al., 1995); moreover, training on one novel consonant generalizes to a similar consonant (Tremblay, Kraus, Carrell, & McGee, 1997). An important aspect of training is that cortical changes can precede behavioral changes (Tremblay, Kraus, & McGee, 1998); therefore, evaluation of neural plasticity might be used to assess the efficacy of a particular training strategy. The cortical response (the N1-P2 complex) has also been used to demonstrate stimulus-specific and general effects of training (Tremblay, Shahin, Picton, & Ross, 2009).
The influence of training is seen even at the level of the cochlea. Young adults were trained to discriminate between consonant-vowel (CV) syllables embedded in a continuous broad-band noise at a +10 dB SNR (de Boer & Thornton, 2008). Activation of the medial olivocochlear bundle (MOCB) was monitored during the 5 days of training through the use of contralateral suppression of evoked otoacoustic emissions. Training improved performance on the CV discrimination task, with the greatest improvement occurring over the first 3 training days. A significant increase in MOCB activation was found, but only in the participants who showed robust improvement (“learners”). The learners showed weaker suppression than the nonlearners on the first day; in fact, the level of MOCB activation was predictive of learning. This last finding would be particularly important for clinical purposes—a measure predicting benefit would be useful for determining treatment candidacy.
These human studies demonstrate plasticity in the young adult auditory system, but it is important to demonstrate plasticity in the older adult auditory system, particularly changes associated with improved communication in challenging listening situations. In addition to a large body of work investigating speech perception difficulties in older adults (Busey, Craig, Clark, & Humes, 2010; Fogerty, Humes, & Kewley-Port, 2010; Humes, 2007; Humes, Burk, Coughlin, Busey, & Strauser, 2007; Humes, Kewley-Port, Fogerty, & Kinney, 2010; Lee & Humes, 2012), Humes and colleagues have extensively studied the effects of word-based auditory training on speech perception in older adults (Burk & Humes, 2007, 2008; Burk, Humes, Amos, & Strauser, 2006), and have demonstrated that training of words in noise generalizes to unfamiliar talkers and persists for at least 6 months (Burk & Humes, 2008).
Home-Based Software Training
Despite the evidence for its benefits in older individuals with hearing loss (Kricos, Holmes, & Doyle, 1992; Rubinstein & Boothroyd, 1987), auditory training is not typically considered in the management of adults with hearing loss. Based on his personal experience of aural rehabilitation following World War II, Ross (1997) makes a case for its inclusion as part of the hearing aid selection process. In the last decade, hearing aid companies have begun to supply auditory training software with the purchase of instruments, presumably in response to the observation that hearing aid users continue to struggle when trying to hear in difficult listening situations, even when wearing the most advanced hearing aid technology. The use of home-based software training programs may eliminate some of the barriers to implementing an in-office training program, such as insufficient time or lack of reimbursement for treatment services.
Sweetow and Sabes conceived of the first in-home training program that achieved widespread use: Listening and Communication Enhancement (LACE™; Neurotone, Inc., Redwood City, CA). LACE combines listening exercises for challenging situations, such as noisy restaurants, competing speakers, and rapid speakers, with top-down approaches to aid understanding—use of context, memory, and strategies to improve communication. Sweetow and Sabes (2006) evaluated the efficacy of this program in a group of older adults with hearing loss who used the training for 30 minutes per day, 5 days a week, for 4 weeks. Older adults who underwent this program experienced improved performance on two clinical tests of speech-in-noise perception, the HINT and the Quick Speech-in-Noise test (QuickSIN; Etymotic Research, Elk Grove Village, IL; Killion, Niquette, Gudmundsen, Revit, & Banerjee, 2004), and on two self-assessments of performance, the Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly (HHIE; Ventry & Weinstein, 1982) and the Communication Scale for Older Adults (COSA; Kaplan, Bally, Brandt, Busacco, & Pray, 1997).
The neural mechanisms underlying improved speech-in-noise perception in young adults who underwent LACE training were assessed in brainstem responses to a speech syllable presented in quiet and in two- and six-talker babble (Song, Skoe, Banai, & Kraus, 2012). The results indicated stronger representation of the F0 in brainstem responses in noise (2- and 6-talker babble) but not in quiet, suggesting that the training increased the robustness of subcortical speech representation, making it more resistant to the degradative effects of noise (Figure 5).
Auditory-Based Cognitive Training
The majority of patients seeking help for hearing in noise, however, are older adults. A large-scale clinical trial was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of an auditory-based cognitive software training program (Brain Fitness Program, Posit Science, San Francisco, CA) in 487 older adults (Smith et al., 2009). This training is based on the assumption that reductions in sensory input can lead to cognitive decline, but that performance of sensory systems can be improved with practice. Participants underwent this training 60 minutes per day, 5 days a week, for 8 weeks. The auditory component of the training focuses the listener’s attention on the CV transition, adaptively expanding and contracting this transition as performance improves or worsens. This perceptual training is combined with increased memory demands. The primary outcome measure in this study was the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neurophysiological Status (Psychological Corp., San Antonio, TX), which demonstrated improvements in memory and attention. The participants also noted subjective improvements in cognitive performance on a cognitive self-report questionnaire (Spina, Ruff, & Mahncke, 2006).
Smith et al. (2009) focused on cognitive outcomes in older adults. Given that the Brain Fitness™ program provides perceptual training, it may also serve as an auditory training tool to improve speech-in-noise perception. The CV transition is perceptually vulnerable (Miller & Nicely, 1955) and older adults have delayed subcortical timing in this transition compared to younger adults (Anderson et al., 2012). Therefore, training that attempts to improve speed of processing of this transition may result in faster neural timing. Faster neural response timing, in turn, may lead to better speech-in-noise perception, given the known relationship between brainstem timing and hearing in noise in children (Anderson et al., 2010; Hornickel, Skoe, Nicol, Zecker, & Kraus, 2009) and older adults (Anderson, Parbery-Clark, White-Schwoch, & Kraus, 2013).
We assessed the use of Brain Fitness auditory-cognitive training in a group of older adults (ages 55–65 years) randomly assigned to complete training or an active control program and found improvements in brainstem timing in response to the consonant-vowel transition (Anderson, White-Schwoch, et al., 2013), the region that is most affected by aging (Anderson et al., 2012; Parbery-Clark et al., 2012a). In addition to this neurophysiological improvement, participants demonstrated gains in speech-in-noise performance, memory, and speed of processing (Figure 6). No changes were found in the active control group, who watched educational DVDs and answered content questions, and whose training was matched to the auditory/cognitive training group for computer usage and training time. This study provides the first evidence for the possibility of auditory training reversing effects of aging on subcortical timing and perceptual and cognitive function.
Training for Individuals With Cochlear Implants
The aforementioned studies were carried out with individuals who have sufficient hearing to benefit from traditional hearing aid amplification. But, individuals who have hearing loss to the extent that they benefit from cochlear implantation have an even greater need for auditory training. Cochlear implants have performed exceptionally well for these individuals when listening to speech in quiet situations, but performance varies from auditory-only open-set word recognition to limited closed-set recognition with visual cues. In addition, cochlear implant design, which delivers the temporal speech envelope but not the fine structure, does not provide sufficient cues for good speech-in-noise or music perception (Ekelid, Kamath, Shannon, Wygonski, & Zeng, 1995; Galvin et al., 2009; Gfeller et al., 2007). Much of the variability in cochlear implant performance is due to the function of the central auditory nervous system. The same cochlear implant will provide different outcomes for individuals who have experienced deprivation-induced changes in auditory mapping, such that the auditory cortex is responding to nonauditory stimuli, compared to individuals who have not experienced great changes in their auditory maps. For example, in most children who have been implanted before 3 years of age, P1 latencies to a CV syllable (representing time of syllable detection in the auditory cortex) gradually decrease until they are equivalent to latencies obtained in age-matched normal hearing children (Gilley, Sharma, & Dorman, 2008). In children who are implanted later, however, P1 latencies may never decrease to levels typical for normal hearing children of the same age.
In an animal model, pairing a tone with food reinforcement leads to increased strength of neural firing to the tone in the rabbit auditory association cortex (i.e., a change in the brain’s response; Kraus & Disterhoft, 1982), but can auditory training change neural responses in individuals with cochlear implants? Ten CI users (ages 25–60 years, three post-lingual onset of deafness) underwent speech-recognition training and experienced gains in vowel, consonant, and sentence identification (Fu, Galvin, Wang, & Nogaki, 2004). They did not, however, improve in gender identification, an ability that would require pitch perception to a degree that is not provided by cochlear implants. Melodic contour identification was used to improve music perception in nine CI users, who demonstrated improvements in both melodic contour identification and in familiar melody identification, suggesting that this kind of training improved the listener’s ability to perceive pitch cues. These studies demonstrate that plasticity is possible despite limitations imposed by cochlear implant technology. The exercises used in the above studies and other training are available to the CI user or any interested party on the website www.tigerspeech.com. Further work is needed to document neural plasticity in older cochlear implant recipients.
Ingredients for Successful Learning
Animal models of learning may inform us of the important ingredients for learning. For example, several studies have demonstrated that pairing auditory stimulation with nucleus basalis activation leads to cortical reorganization and enhanced perception (Bakin & Weinberger, 1996; Kilgard & Merzenich, 1998; Puckett, Pandya, Moucha, Dai, & Kilgard, 2007). The nucleus basalis is the primary source of acetylcholine in the cerebral cortex, and its stimulation can increase cortical excitability and the transmission of action potentials (Metherate & Ashe, 1993). The release of acetylcholine is required for certain types of learning, such as recognition memory (Warburton et al., 2003), and is activated through mechanisms that include enhanced attention (Herrero et al., 2008); therefore, an auditory training paradigm that induces acetylcholine release may have increased effectiveness. Nucleus basalis stimulation is highly invasive and cannot therefore be considered a treatment tool for learning or rehabilitation in humans. Because of the limitations of nucleus basalis stimulation in the treatment of humans, Kilgard and colleagues have successfully applied vagus stimulation, which is less invasive, as a tool for treating tinnitus in rats (Engineer et al., 2011) and are currently investigating applications in humans.
Bavelier and colleagues have investigated another model of learning: the effects of videogame playing on both perceptual and cognitive function. They have found that videogame players have enhanced attention (Dye, Green, & Bavelier, 2009a), speed of processing (Dye, Green, & Bavelier, 2009b), and visual perception (Green & Bavelier, 2007; Li, Polat, Scalzo, & Bavelier, 2010). Importantly, these experiments have demonstrated causal relationships: non-videogame players can improve on these skills after a period of training on videogames. These effects generalized to real-world skills and maintained over a period of several months (as reviewed in Bavelier, Green, Pouget, & Schrater, 2012). Although a direct link has not been established between neuromodulatory release and these gains, one might expect that videogame playing taps into neural reward centers with a subsequent increase in neuromodulators such as acetylcholine.
The abovementioned experiments demonstrate that specific training platforms can substantially increase training effects; however, not every computerized training program shows benefits. A large (N = 11,340) 6-week online study failed to find any improvement in general cognitive function (Owen et al., 2010). There are possible reasons for the lack of benefit found in this study. The participants did the training tasks 10 minutes per day, 3 days a week, for 6 weeks, resulting in a total training time of 3 hours, in contrast with the 40 hours of training supplied by the Brain Fitness program or thousands of hours engaged in by musicians. The age range in the study was large, 18–60 years, and we expect that the older participants may have required more training or a different training strategy than one that is effective for young adults. Given the evidence of Bavelier’s group, effective training may need to provide adequate rewards to be effective. As we seek to improve auditory training programs, we must consider ways in which to increase intrinsic rewards and to make the training more engaging. Collaborations with developers of popular video games may be beneficial in this respect.
Outstanding Questions
To provide the most effective treatment, a number of questions should be explored in future studies. Comparisons of auditory-only training versus auditory plus cognitive training or hearing aids only versus hearing aids plus training should be performed to determine the most efficacious course of treatment. Along the same lines, it would be important to identify the features of each training program that provide the greatest benefit for specific deficits. The clinician will also benefit from a measure that predicts benefits from treatment, such as level of medial olivary cochlear bundle activation identified in the de Boer and Thornton (2008) study or brainstem F0 amplitude in the Song et al. (2012) study. The LACE and Brain Fitness programs greatly differ in total treatment time (20 vs. 40 hours). Future work should identify how much training is needed for different age groups and levels of hearing loss, and the persistence of training effects. Finally, the degree to which training needs differ for increased levels of hearing loss should be ascertained.
Summary
Given evidence of perceptual and physiological central processing deficits associated with aging and/or hearing loss, auditory training must be considered an essential component of management for individuals with hearing loss. Older adults rely on cognitive resources to enhance perception; therefore, training for older adults that focuses on both perceptual and cognitive function may provide greater benefits than training that does not include cognitive demands. Both lifelong experiences and short-term training affect speech-in-noise perception and neural speech processing. Auditory evoked potentials, especially the auditory brainstem response to complex sounds, provide an objective assessment of treatment efficacy. Developers of auditory training programs should consider platforms that naturally engage neural reward centers; both musical training and video game playing may inform the principles that lead to enhanced learning.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Travis White-Schwoch for his comments and suggestions on the manuscript. This work was supported by NSF BCS-1057556, by NIH (T32 DC009399-01A10 & RO1 DC10016), and the Knowles Hearing Center.
Footnotes
Disclosures: Samira Anderson and Nina Kraus have no financial or nonfinancial relationships related to the content of this article.
Contributor Information
Samira Anderson, Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Communication Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL; Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, MD.
Nina Kraus, Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Communication Sciences, Neurobiology and Physiology, Otolaryngology, Institute for Neuroscience, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL.
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