1 / 45

Issues in Human Auditory Development

Issues in Human Auditory Development. Lynne Werner Dept. Speech and Hearing Sciences University of Washington. Auditory development?. Stages of auditory development. Encoding of sound (to 6 months of age) Selectivity of sound processing (to 7 yr)

rufus
Download Presentation

Issues in Human Auditory Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Issues in Human Auditory Development Lynne Werner Dept. Speech and Hearing Sciences University of Washington

  2. Auditory development?

  3. Stages of auditory development • Encoding of sound (to 6 months of age) • Selectivity of sound processing (to 7 yr) • Flexibility in sound processing (to adulthood)

  4. Sites of postnatal auditory system maturation • Peripheral • Low-level neural (brainstem) • High-level neural (cortex)

  5. Immaturity is “additive” Infant Encoding Threshold Selectivity Flexibility Adult

  6. Experience with sound is a major contributor to auditory development

  7. Maturation of sound encoding • Sensitivity to sound • Spectral resolution • Temporal resolution

  8. Sensitivity to sound: pure-tone thresholds

  9. Sensitivity to sound Werner & Holmer, in preparation

  10. Why does sensitivity to sound change? Conductive maturation

  11. -15 -10 -5 Conductance (dB re: adults) 0 5 10 15 0.5 1 2 4 8 Frequency (kHz) 10 0.4 Conductive maturation Werner & Holmer, in preparation

  12. 20 15 3 months 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 15 6 months 10 Conductance (residual after frequency partialled out) 5 0 -5 -10 -15 15 Adults 10 5 0 -5 -10 -15 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 Threshold (residual after frequency partialled out) r = -.53 Conductive maturation r = -.36 r = -.50 Werner & Holmer, in preparation

  13. Why does sensitivity to sound change? • Conductive maturation • Maturation of efficiency of transmission through the brainstem

  14. Maturation of neural transmission Werner, Folsom, & Mancl (1994) Hearing Research, 77: 88.

  15. Why does sensitivity to sound change? • Conductive maturation • Cochlear maturation? • Maturation of efficiency of transmission through the brainstem

  16. Spectral resolution Nguyen et al. (1994 ) J Acoust Soc Am96: 33

  17. ? Spectral resolution Tuning curve Level Q10 = Probe frequency Level Bandwidth Frequency Masker Frequency

  18. ABR Spetner & Olsho (1990) Child Dev61: 632 Folsom & Wynne (1987) J Acoust Soc Am 81:412 Spectral resolution Psychophysical

  19. Temporal resolution Amplitude Time Van Tasell et al. (1987) J Acoust Soc Am 82:1152.

  20. Temporal resolution? • Gap detection immature in behavioral threshold, but not in evoked potentials. • AM detection immature, but increasing modulation rate does not have a drastically different effect on infant than adult AM detection. • Forward masking looks mature at 6 months, but immature at 3 months. • Tone-onset-time and voice-onset-time sensitivity similar to adult.

  21. What is the role of experience in early auditory development?

  22. Role of experience “normal” auditory experience Tuning of neurons in the inferior colliculus Baby - broad Adult - sharp Threshold Frequency Sanes & Constantine-Paton (1985) J Neurosci5: 1152

  23. Baby - broad Adult - broad Threshold Frequency Role of experience Tuning of neurons in the inferior colliculus clicks Sanes & Constantine-Paton (1985) J Neurosci5: 1152

  24. Early audition • Reduced sensation level • Fuzzy representation of spectral characteristics of sound • Possibly good representation of changes in sound amplitude over time • Development probably depends on sound input.

  25. Sure, I hear the difference. It doesn’t take much!

  26. Maturation of selectivity

  27. Listening selectively Level Frequency

  28. Listening selectively Bargones & Werner (1994) Psychol Sci5: 170

  29. Listening unselectively (kHz) Bargones & Werner (1994) Psychol Sci5: 170

  30. Children use different information in phoneme identification • Nittrouer: Global, transition-carried information about syllable structure Nittrouer (2006) J Acoust Soc Am 120: 1799. • Sussman: More acoustically distinctive information in face of sensory limitations Sussman (2001) J Acoust Soc Am 109: 1173. • Mayo and Turk: Sometimes more acoustically distinctive information, but sometimes less efficient in use of more distinctive information. Mayo & Turk (2005) J Acoust Soc Am 118: 1730.

  31. The spectral and temporal information in speech is represented in the infants’ and child’s auditory system. Distinctive v. similar spectral inforrmation Mayo & Turk (2005) J Acoust Soc Am 118: 1730.

  32. Possible underlying mechanisms • Perceptual separation • Selective attention • Learning of less salient or more variable acoustic cues requires more experience

  33. Role of experience? • Is experience with sound necessary for the development of perceptual separation or selective attention? • Experience is certainly required to build up detailed representations of speech.

  34. Implications of unselective, global listening

  35. Implication: Susceptibility to distraction

  36. Susceptibility to distraction Leibold & Werner (2006) J Acoust Soc Am 119: 3960

  37. Implication: Learning speech in noisy environments

  38. Maturation of flexibility

  39. Adults 11;6-12;6 6;0-7;6 Maturation of flexibility Full cues Single cues Hazan & Barrett (2000) J Phonetics28, 377.

  40. Role of experience Clearly kids have to hear speech in lots of different contexts to learn which cues work best under what conditions.

  41. Implication: Children can still get messed up under difficult listening conditions. If you want kids to understand something, don’t make the listening conditions difficult.

  42. Conclusions • The course of auditory development is prolonged. • Early in postnatal life, the primary change in hearing has to do with the quality of the neural representation of sound. • Later in infancy and well into childhood, changes in hearing have to do with isolating fine acoustic details. • During later childhood, children are still learning when to listen to those details.

  43. Thanks to • Nancy Spetner, Jill Bargones, Lori Leibold and all members of the Infant Hearing Lab past and present. • Funding from NIDCD.

  44. Presentation available at http://faculty.washington.edu/lawerner/asha2006

More Related