Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes

Auditory training is an intervention that aims to improve auditory performance and help alleviate the difficulties associated with hearing loss. To be an effective intervention, any task-specific learning needs to transfer to functional benefits in real-world listening. The present study aimed to id...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Henshaw, Helen, Ferguson, Melanie A.
Other Authors: Dau, Torsten
Format: Book Section
Published: Danavox Jubilee Foundation 2014
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28641/
_version_ 1848793616942628864
author Henshaw, Helen
Ferguson, Melanie A.
author2 Dau, Torsten
author_facet Dau, Torsten
Henshaw, Helen
Ferguson, Melanie A.
author_sort Henshaw, Helen
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Auditory training is an intervention that aims to improve auditory performance and help alleviate the difficulties associated with hearing loss. To be an effective intervention, any task-specific learning needs to transfer to functional benefits in real-world listening. The present study aimed to identify optimal outcome measures to assess the benefits of auditory training for people with hearing loss. Thirty existing hearing-aid users with mild-moderate sensorineural hearing loss trained on a phoneme discrimination in noise task. Complex measures of listening and cognition were assessed pre- and post-training. Functional benefits to everyday listening were examined using a dual-task of listening and memory and an adaptive two-competing talker task. There was significant on-task learning for the trained task (p < .001), and significant transfer of learning to improvements in competing speech (p < .05) and dual-task performance (p < .01). For the dual-task, improvements were shown for a challenging listening condition (0 dB SNR), with no improvements where the task was either too easy (in quiet) or too difficult (-4 dB SNR). Findings suggest that for listening abilities, the development of complex cognitive skills may be more important than the refinement of sensory processing. Outcome measures should be sensitive to the functional benefits of auditory training and set at an appropriately challenging level.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:03:08Z
format Book Section
id nottingham-28641
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:03:08Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Danavox Jubilee Foundation
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-286412020-05-04T20:16:49Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28641/ Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes Henshaw, Helen Ferguson, Melanie A. Auditory training is an intervention that aims to improve auditory performance and help alleviate the difficulties associated with hearing loss. To be an effective intervention, any task-specific learning needs to transfer to functional benefits in real-world listening. The present study aimed to identify optimal outcome measures to assess the benefits of auditory training for people with hearing loss. Thirty existing hearing-aid users with mild-moderate sensorineural hearing loss trained on a phoneme discrimination in noise task. Complex measures of listening and cognition were assessed pre- and post-training. Functional benefits to everyday listening were examined using a dual-task of listening and memory and an adaptive two-competing talker task. There was significant on-task learning for the trained task (p < .001), and significant transfer of learning to improvements in competing speech (p < .05) and dual-task performance (p < .01). For the dual-task, improvements were shown for a challenging listening condition (0 dB SNR), with no improvements where the task was either too easy (in quiet) or too difficult (-4 dB SNR). Findings suggest that for listening abilities, the development of complex cognitive skills may be more important than the refinement of sensory processing. Outcome measures should be sensitive to the functional benefits of auditory training and set at an appropriately challenging level. Danavox Jubilee Foundation Dau, Torsten Santurette, S. 2014 Book Section PeerReviewed Henshaw, Helen and Ferguson, Melanie A. (2014) Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes. In: Auditory plasticity - listening with the brain. Danavox Jubilee Foundation, Ballerup, Denmark, pp. 45-52. ISBN 978-87-990013-4-7
spellingShingle Henshaw, Helen
Ferguson, Melanie A.
Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes
title Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes
title_full Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes
title_fullStr Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes
title_short Assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes
title_sort assessing the benefits of auditory training to real-world listening: identifying appropriate and sensitive outcomes
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/28641/