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. 2021 Mar 20;11(3):394. doi: 10.3390/brainsci11030394

Table 2.

Summary of representative studies of degraded speech processing in clinical populations.

Population Study, Degradation Participants Methodology Major Findings
Traumatic brain injury Gallun et al. [80]: Central auditory processing 36 blast-exposed military veterans (age: 32.8); 29 controls (age: 32.1) Participants went through a battery of standardised behavioural tests of central auditory function: temporal pattern perception, GIN, MLD, DDT, SSW, and QuickSIN. While no participant performed poorly on all behavioural testing, performance was impaired in central auditory processing for the blast-exposed veterans in comparison to matched-controls.
Saunders et al. [81]: Central auditory processing 99 military veterans (age: 34.1) Participants went through self-reported measures as well as a battery of standardised behavioural measures: HINT, NA LiSN-S, ATTR, TCST, and SSW. Participants in this study showed measurable performance deficits on speech-in-noise perception, binaural processing, temporal resolution, and speech segregation.
Gallun et al. [82]: Central auditory processing 30 blast-exposed military veterans, with a least one blast occurring 10 years prior to study (age: 37.3); 29 controls (age: 39.2) Participants went through a battery of standardised behavioural tests of central auditory function: GIN, DDT, SSW, FPT, and MLD. Replicating the findings from Gallun et al., 2012, this study found that the central auditory processing deficits persisted in individuals tested an average of more than 7 years after blast exposure.
Papesh et al. [83]: Central auditory processing 16 blast-exposed veterans (age 36.9); 13 veteran controls (age 38) with normal peripheral hearing Participants competed self-reported measures and standardised tests of speech-in-noise perception, DDT, SSW, TCST, plus auditory event-related potential studies. Impaired cortical sensory gating was primarily influenced by a diagnosis of TBI and reduced habituation by a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder. Cortical sensory gating and habituation to acoustic startle strongly predicted degraded speech perception
Stroke aphasia Bamiou et al. [84]: Dichotic listening 8 patients with insular strokes (age: 63); 8 control participants (age: 63) Participants heard pairs of spoken digits presented simultaneously to each ear, and were asked to repeat all four digits. Dichotic listening was abnormal in five of the eight stroke patients.
Dunton et al. [85]: Accents 16 participants with aphasia (age: 59); 16 controls (age: 59; English) Participants heard English sentences spoken with a familiar (South-East British England) or unfamiliar (Nigerian) accent. Aphasia patients made more errors in comprehending sentences spoken in an unfamiliar accent vs. a familiar accent.
Jacks and Haley [86]: AAF (MAF) 10 aphasia patients (age: 53.1); 10 controls (age: 63.1; English) Participants produced spoken sentences with no feedback, DAF, FAF or noise-masked auditory feedback (MAF). Speech rate increased under MAF but decreased with DAF and FAF in most participants with aphasia.
Parkinson’s disease Liu et al. [87]: AAF (MAF and FAF) 12 PD participants (ge: 62.3); 13 control participants (age: 68.7) Participants sustained a vowel whilst receiving changes in feedback of loudness (±3/4 dB) or pitch (±100 cents). All participants produced compensatory responses to AAF, but response sizes were larger in PD than controls.
Chen et al. [88]: AAF (FAF) 15 people with PD (age: 61); 15 control participants (age 61; Cantonese) Participants were asked to vocalize a vowel sound with AAF pitch-shifted upwards or downwards. PD participants produced larger magnitudes of compensation.
Alzheimer’s disease Gates et al. [89]: Dichotic digits 17 ADs (age: 84); 64 MCI (age: 82.3); 232 controls (age: 78.8) Participants listened to 40 numbers presented in pairs to each ear simultaneously. AD patients scored the worst in the dichotic digits, followed by the MCI group and then the controls.
Golden et al. [90]: Auditory scene analysis 13 AD participants (age: 66); 17 control participants (age: 68) In fMRI, participants listened to their own name interleaved with or superimposed on multi-talker babble. Significantly enhanced activation of right supramarginal gyrus in the AD vs. control group for the cocktail party effect.
Ranasinghe et al. [91]: AAF (FAF) 19 AD participants; 16 control participants Participants were asked to produce a spoken vowel in context of AAF, with perturbations of pitch. AD patients showed enhanced compensatory response and poorer pitch-response persistence vs. controls.
Primary progressive aphasia Hailstone et al. [92]: Accents 20 ADs (age: 66.4); 6 nfvPPA (age: 66); 35 controls (age: 65); British English Accent comprehension and accent recognition was assessed. VBM examined grey matter correlates. Reduced comprehension for phrases in unfamiliar vs. familiar accents in AD and for words in nfvPPA; in AD group, grey matter associations of accent comprehension and recognition in anterior superior temporal lobe
Cope et al. [93]: Noise-vocoding 11 nfvPPA (age: 72); 11 control participants (age: 72) During MEG, participants listened to vocoded words presented with written text that matched/mismatched. People with nfvPPA compared to controls showed delayed resolution of predictions in temporal lobe, enhanced frontal beta power and top-down fronto-temporal connectivity; precision of predictions correlated with beta power across groups
Hardy et al. [94]: SWS 9 nfvPPA (age: 69.6); 10 svPPA (age: 64.9); 7 lvPPA (age: 66.3); 17 control (age: 67.7) Participants transcribed SWS of numbers/locations. VBM examined grey matter correlates in combined patient cohort. Variable task performance groups; all showed spontaneous perceptual learning effects for SWS numbers; grey matter correlates in a distributed left hemisphere network extending beyond classical speech-processing cortices, perceptual learning effect in left inferior parietal cortex

Information in the Participants column is based on available information from the original papers; age is given as a mean or range and language refers to participants’ native languages. Abbreviations: AAF, altered auditory feedback; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; ATTR, Adaptive Tests of Temporal Resolution; DAF, delayed auditory feedback; dB, decibels; DDT, Dichotic Digits Test; FAF; frequency altered feedback; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; FPT, Frequency Patterns Tests (FPT); GIN, Gaps-In-Noise test; HINT, Hearing in Noise Test; lvPPA, logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia; MAF, masked/masking auditory feedback; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MEG, magnetoencephalography; MLD, The Masking Level Difference; NA LiSN-S, North American Listening in Spatialised Noise-Sentence test; nfvPPA, nonfluent primary progressive aphasia; PD, Parkinson’s disease; PR, perceptual restoration; QuickSIN, Quick Speech in Noise; SSW, Staggered Spondaic Words; SWS, sinewave speech; svPPA, semantic variant primary progressive aphasia; TBI, traumatic brain injury; TCST, Time Compressed Speech Test; VBM, voxel based morphometry.