The contributions of audibility and cognitive factors to the benefit provided by amplified speech to older adults.
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Effects of Aging and Adult-Onset Hearing Loss on Cortical Auditory RegionsAge-related deficits in the processing of fundamental frequency differences for the intelligibility of competing voicesIncreased activity in frontal motor cortex compensates impaired speech perception in older adults.The development and standardization of Self-assessment for Hearing Screening of the ElderlyConsonant recognition loss in hearing impaired listenersCortical Measures of Binaural Processing Predict Spatial Release from Masking Performance.Glimpsing Speech in the Presence of Nonsimultaneous Amplitude Modulations From a Competing Talker: Effect of Modulation Rate, Age, and Hearing Loss.Text as a Supplement to Speech in Young and Older Adults.Auditory Training: Evidence for Neural Plasticity in Older Adults.Spectrotemporal Modulation Sensitivity as a Predictor of Speech-Reception Performance in Noise With Hearing Aids.Electrophysiologic Assessment of Auditory Training Benefits in Older AdultsHearing impairment, cognition and speech understanding: exploratory factor analyses of a comprehensive test battery for a group of hearing aid users, the n200 study.Are Experienced Hearing Aid Users Faster at Grasping the Meaning of a Sentence Than Inexperienced Users? An Eye-Tracking StudyRelationship Among Signal Fidelity, Hearing Loss, and Working Memory for Digital Noise Suppression.Impact of Aging and Cognition on Hearing Assistive Technology UseSentence intelligibility during segmental interruption and masking by speech-modulated noise: Effects of age and hearing loss.Effects of age and hearing loss on recognition of unaccented and accented multisyllabic words.Individual sensitivity to spectral and temporal cues in listeners with hearing impairment.Measuring listening effort: driving simulator versus simple dual-task paradigm.Associations between speech understanding and auditory and visual tests of verbal working memory: effects of linguistic complexity, task, age, and hearing loss.Non-native listeners' recognition of high-variability speech using PRESTO.Relationship between Auditory and Cognitive Abilities in Older AdultsEffect of initial-consonant intensity on the speed of lexical decisions.Auditory distraction transmitted by a cochlear implant alters allocation of attentional resources.Speech perception in older hearing impaired listeners: benefits of perceptual training.Aided and unaided speech perception by older hearing impaired listenersAge-group differences in speech identification despite matched audiometrically normal hearing: contributions from auditory temporal processing and cognition.Spatial separation benefit for unaided and aided listening.Normal adult aging and the contextual influences affecting speech and meaningful sound perception.The advantage of knowing the talker.Working memory, age, and hearing loss: susceptibility to hearing aid distortionSome factors underlying individual differences in speech recognition on PRESTO: a first reportAuditory and cognitive factors underlying individual differences in aided speech-understanding among older adults.The relative importance of consonant and vowel segments to the recognition of words and sentences: effects of age and hearing loss.Why middle-aged listeners have trouble hearing in everyday settings.The Ease of Language Understanding (ELU) model: theoretical, empirical, and clinical advances.Spatial benefit of bilateral hearing AIDSAuditory brainstem response to complex sounds predicts self-reported speech-in-noise performance.A new test of attention in listening (TAIL) predicts auditory performanceCochlear dead regions in typical hearing aid candidates: prevalence and implications for use of high-frequency speech cues
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The contributions of audibility and cognitive factors to the benefit provided by amplified speech to older adults.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on July 2007
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
The contributions of audibilit ...... lified speech to older adults.
@en
The contributions of audibilit ...... lified speech to older adults.
@nl
type
label
The contributions of audibilit ...... lified speech to older adults.
@en
The contributions of audibilit ...... lified speech to older adults.
@nl
prefLabel
The contributions of audibilit ...... lified speech to older adults.
@en
The contributions of audibilit ...... lified speech to older adults.
@nl
P356
P1476
The contributions of audibilit ...... lified speech to older adults.
@en
P2093
Larry E Humes
P304
P356
10.3766/JAAA.18.7.6
P577
2007-07-01T00:00:00Z