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Sound localization latency in normal hearing and simulated unilateral hearing loss.

Authors :
Eklöf, Martin
Asp, Filip
Berninger, Erik
Source :
Hearing Research. Sep2020, Vol. 395, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Directing gaze towards auditory events is a natural behavior. In addition to the well-known accuracy of auditory elicited gaze responses for normal binaural listening, their latency is a measure of possible clinical interest and methodological importance. The aim was to develop a clinically feasible method to assess sound localization latency (SLL), and to study SLL as a function of simulated unilateral hearing loss (SUHL) and the relationship with accuracy. Eight healthy and normal-hearing adults (18–40 years) participated in this study. Horizontal gaze responses, recorded by non-invasive corneal reflection eye-tracking, were obtained during azimuthal shifts (24 trials) of a 3-min continuous auditory stimulus. In each trial, a sigmoid function was fitted to gaze samples. Latency was estimated by the abscissa corresponding to 50% of the arctangent amplitude. SLL was defined as the mean latency across trials. SLL was measured in normal-hearing and simulated SUHL conditions (SUHL 30 and SUHL 43 : mean threshold of 30 dB HL and 43 dB HL across 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz). In the normal-hearing condition, the mean ± SD SLL was 280 ± 40 ms (n = 8) with a test-retest SD = 20 ms. A linear mixed model showed a statistically significant effect of listening condition on SLL. The SUHL 30 and SUHL 43 conditions revealed a mean SLL of 370 ± 49 ms and 540 ± 120 ms, respectively. Repeated measures correlation analysis showed a clear relationship between SLL and the average sound localization accuracy (R 2 = 0.94). The rapid and reliable method to obtain SLL may be an important clinical tool for evaluation of binaural processing. Future studies in clinical cohorts are needed to assess whether SLL may reveal information about binaural processing abilities beyond that afforded by sound localization accuracy. • Sound localization latency can be reliably and rapidly measured by gaze responses. • The latency increases systematically with increased simulated unilateral hearing loss. • Latency and accuracy are strongly associated across degrees of the simulated loss. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03785955
Volume :
395
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Hearing Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145407839
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.heares.2020.108011