Loading

Annals of Otolaryngology and Rhinology

Speech-in-Noise Recognition in School-Aged Children with Hearing Loss: Evidence of a Critical Condition

Research Article | Open Access | Volume 10 | Issue 4

  • 1. Department of Speech Therapy, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Iran
  • 2. R&D Manager, Soroush Auditory Rehabilitation Center, Iran
  • 3. Founder Director, Soroush Auditory Rehabilitation Center, Iran
+ Show More - Show Less
Corresponding Authors
Mohammad Majid Oryadi-Zanjani, Department of Speech Therapy, School of Rehabilitation Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Abiverdi, Chamran Blvd., P.O. Box: 71345-1733, Shiraz, Iran
Abstract

Previous research findings demonstrated that cochlear implants (CIs) users have essential challenges with speech recognition in the presence of background noise. Therefore, this study aimed to determine speech-in-noise (SiN) perception in Persian school-aged children with CIs/hearing aids (HAs) compared to their peers with normal hearing (NH). The research was administered as a cross-sectional study. Speech-in-noise performance in thirty-three school-aged children with hearing loss (19 unilateral CIs users and 14 bilateral HAs users) was compared to twenty school-aged children with normal hearing by using the Persian Lexical Neighborhood Tests (PLNTs). To make sure that floor or ceiling effects would not affect the children’s performance, the PLNTs were performed by the sound field at different levels of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The SiN performance on all four subscales of the PLNTs was significantly poorer in Persian school-aged CIs/HAs users than their peers with NH for all stepwise increases in the SNR (P < 0.001). The Persian school-aged CIs users experience a critical condition related to listening spectrally degraded speech in noisy environments such as home, school, and classroom due to SiN perception insufficiency.

Keywords

• Lexical neighborhood tests

• Speech perception

• Speech-in-noise recognition

• Cochlear implants

• Hearing loss

• Persian-speaking school-aged children

CITATION

Oryadi-Zanjani MM, Vahab M (2023) Speech-in-Noise Recognition in School-Aged Children with Hearing Loss: Evidence of a Critical Condition. Ann Otolaryngol Rhinol 10(4): 1324.

INTRODUCTION

A critical condition faces school-aged children with hearing loss (HL) who risk academic learning problems due to deficiency of speech-in-noise (SiN) perception [1,2]. Previous research findings demonstrated that cochlear implants (CIs) users have significant challenges with speech recognition in the presence of background noise [3-9]. In noisy conditions, they experience significant listening and communication problems in various verbal interactions in everyday life [10,11]. Further, language ability is one of the determining factors of children’s SiN perception [5,6,12,13]. Conversely, SiN perception problems can adversely affect spoken language development [6,14]. That is, the speech recognition of school-aged children with HL correlates with their spoken language performance [6,15,13]. Schoolaged children with HL may be exhausted in typical classroom environments due to the need to expend more effort listening than their peers with normal hearing (NH) [16].

Although the findings showed that the pediatric CIs recipients had poor performance in both speech perception in quiet [17- 19] and in noise [20,21,1-2,13] compared to their peers with NH, as Zaltz et al., noted, fewer studies have been administered to assess SiN perception in prelingually deafened CI users than postlingually ones [9]. Accordingly, merely six examinations have been issued on SiN perception in Persian pediatric CIs users [22- 27], and among them, three studies were focused explicitly on Persian preschool- and school-aged children with and without HL [24-27]. Their findings emphasized the children’s poor performance on SiN perception.

According to a recent systematic review by Oryadi-Zanjani et al. [28], there are just two practical assessment tools to measure SiN perception in Persian children so far include the Persian Lexical Neighborhood Tests (PMLNTs and PDLNTs) [29] and the Persian version of the words-in-noise [30]. In their studies, Oryadi-Zanjani and Vahab explained the PLNTs and the PLNTspreschool version (PLNTs-PV) as valid assessment toolkits to measure SiN perception in children with HL [24,26-27]. Hence, to design and execute experimental studies to find an efficient interventional approach for improving children’s listening performance in background noise, it is necessary to perform more specific studies on the children’s problems in listening under spectrally degraded conditions. Therefore, considering the SiN perception, this study aimed to determine SiN recognition in Persian school-aged children with HL compared to their peers with NH using the PLNTs. The assumption was the children using CIs or HAs performed significantly poorer than those with NH.

METHODS

The research was administered as a cross-sectional study. Informed consent was obtained from the parents of the children participating in the study, and the research protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee of Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran (the approval number: IR.SUMS.REC.1396. S39). The aim was to assess SiN in Persian school-aged children with HL using the Persian Lexical Neighborhood Tests (PLNTs) [28,29] and to compare the children’s SiN performance with their peers with NH.

Participants

Twenty Persian-speaking children with NH between the ages of 6 to 12 years (mean = 9.35) were recruited through convenient sampling from a primary school in Shiraz, Iran. The inclusion criteria included: age, Persian-speaking, normal hearing thresholds, typical communication, speech and language skills, average literacy, and moderate-to-high educational status. The participant’s health status was verified by each child’s school health case record and by interviewing teachers and parents. Accordingly, all of them had normal hearing thresholds.

Thirty-three 7-to-13-year-old children with severe to profound HL (mean = 9.12; 19 unilateral CIs users and 14 bilateral hearing aids (HAs) users) were recruited through consecutive sampling methods from primary schools in Shiraz, Iran. All participants met the following inclusion criteria: 1) spoken Persian as the primary language, 2) a bilateral symmetrical sensorineural congenital HL with pure tone average thresholds > 30 dB HL, 3) normal tympanometry bilaterally, 4) the age of hearing aid fitting under two years old, 5) the age of implantation under three years old, 6) using oral language as communication method pre- and post-implantation, 7) using HAs as a trial before cochlear implantation, 8) educated in Soroush Auditory Rehabilitation Center in Shiraz, Iran, before entering school, and 9) no additional handicapping conditions.

Assessment tools

Oryadi-Zanjani and Zamani et al. [29], developed a lexically controlled assessment toolkit (4 subscales) entitled the Persian Lexical Neighborhood Tests (PLNTs) based on the Neighborhood Activation Model to measure SWR in Persian-speaking children which includes: The Persian Monosyllabic Lexical Neighborhood Tests (PMLNT-easy [18 words] and PMLNT-hard [27 words]) and the Persian Disyllabic Lexical Neighborhood Test (PDLNTeasy [18 words] and PDLNT-hard [27 words]). The PLNTs were administered to 20 Persian-speaking 7-to-13-year-old children with NH. They concluded that the PLNTs are a practical languageindependent toolkit to assess the SWR of Persian-speaking children under spectrally degraded conditions [29].

Procedure

We followed the instructions listed in the study of OryadiZanjani and Zamani et al. [29], to examine the children. Accordingly, the experiments were administered on -2, 0, 2, 4, and 15 dB SNR to ensure that floor or ceiling effects would not affect the children’s performance. All stimulus words were presented at each of these SNRs. All twenty participants with NH and thirteen with HL (CIs users = 3 and HAs users = 10) completed the examination. In other words, 20 participants (CIs users = 16 and HAs users = 4) could not hear the words in the noise. The means of the participants’ scores were compared statistically through IBM SPSS version 23 software at the significance level 0.05.

RESULTS

The means and the standard deviations of the scores of school-aged children with HL and their peers with NH in the PLNTs based on the SNR levels are shown in Table 1.

Table 1: The scores of children with and without hearing loss in the PLNTs basedon SNR levels

 

Subscales

 

Number

SNR (dB)

Children with HL

Children with NH

Mean (SD)

Mean (SD)

PMLNT-easy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

HI-test = 13

HI-retest = 9

NH= 20

 

 

-2

0.18 (0.11)

0.63 (0.08)

PMLNT-hard

0.15 (0.11)

0.46 (0.09)

PDLNT-easy

0.44 (0.17)

0.76 (0.08)

PDLNT-hard

0.29 (0.12)

0.69 (0.07)

PMLNT-easy

 

 

0

0.25 (0.17)

0.75 (0.09)

PMLNT-hard

0.17 (0.10)

0.52 (0.10)

PDLNT-easy

0.54 (0.17)

0.84 (0.05)

PDLNT-hard

0.35 (0.17)

0.76 (0.08)

PMLNT-easy

 

 

2

0.34 (0.25)

0.80 (0.09)

PMLNT-hard

0.21 (0.09)

0.65 (0.10)

PDLNT-easy

0.65 (0.15)

0.89 (0.04)

PDLNT-hard

0.50 (0.13)

0.80 (0.07)

PMLNT-easy

 

 

4

0.34 (0.16)

0.84 (0.06)

PMLNT-hard

0.29 (0.10)

0.69 (0.12)

PDLNT-easy

0.70 (0.11)

0.91 (0.04)

PDLNT-hard

0.54 (0.13)

0.84 (0.07)

PMLNT-easy

 

HI-test = 33

HI-retest = 9

NH = 20

 

 

15

0.70 (0.19)

1

PMLNT-hard

0.58 (0.15)

1

PDLNT-easy

0.85 (0.18)

1

PDLNT-hard

0.71 (0.10)

1

Comparison of mean scores on PMLNT-easy

The mean scores on the PMLNT-easy in the SNR levels (-2 to 15 dB) were compared between the children with HL and those with NH by the Repeated Measures ANOVA. A significant difference was found between the two groups for all stepwise increases in the SNR (P < 0.001) (Figure 1).

Comparison of the PMLNT-easy scores between children with and without hearing loss

Figure 1: Comparison of the PMLNT-easy scores between children with and without hearing loss

Comparison of mean scores on PMLNT-hard

The mean scores on the PMLNT-hard in the SNR levels (-2 to 15 dB) were compared between the children with HL and those with NH by the Repeated Measures ANOVA. A significant difference was found between the two groups for all stepwise increases in the SNR (P < 0.001) (Figure 2).

Comparison of the PMLNT-hard scores between children with and without hearing loss

Figure 2: Comparison of the PMLNT-hard scores between children with and without hearing loss

Comparison of mean scores on PDLNT-easy

The mean scores on the PDLNT-easy in the SNR levels (-2 to 15 dB) were compared between the children with HL and those with NH by the Repeated Measures ANOVA. A significant difference was found between the two groups for all stepwise increases in the SNR (P < 0.001) (Figure 3).

Comparison of the PDLNT-easy scores between children with and without hearing loss

Figure 3: Comparison of the PDLNT-easy scores between children with and without hearing loss

Comparison of mean scores on PDLNT-hard

The mean scores on the PDLNT-hard in the SNR levels (-2 to 15 dB) were compared between the children with HL and those with NH by the Repeated Measures ANOVA. A significant difference was found between the two groups for all stepwise increases in the SNR (P < 0.001) (Figure 4).

Comparison of the PDLNT-hard scores between children with and without hearing loss

Figure 4: Comparison of the PDLNT-hard scores between children with and without hearing loss

Comparison of differences in the means of PLNTs scores

As shown in Table 2,

Table 2: Comparison of the differences of the PLNTs subscales between children with and without hearing loss

 

 

Differences

 

SNR levels

 

N

-2 dB

0 dB

2 dB

4 dB

 

N

15 dB

Mean (SD)

P-value

Mean (SD)

P-value

Mean (SD)

P-value

Mean (SD)

P-value

Mean (SD)

P-value

HI^

NH~

HI

NH

HI

NH

HI

NH

HI

NH

D1α

HI = 13

NH = 20

0.03

(0.11)

0.17

(0.13)

P > 0.05

0.08

(0.13)

0.22

(0.15)

P < 0.05

0.12

(0.21)

0.15

(0.13)

P > 0.05

0.05

(0.11)

0.15

(0.12)

P > 0.05

HI = 33

NH = 20

0.12

(0.19)

0.00

P < 0.05

D2∞

HI = 13

NH = 20

0.14

(0.15)

0.07

(0.08)

P > 0.05

0.19

(0.12)

0.08

(0.08)

P < 0.05

0.15

(0.16)

0.09

(0.07)

P > 0.05

0.16

(0.14)

0.07

(0.07)

P < 0.05

HI = 33

NH = 20

0.14

(0.16)

0.00

P < 0.001

D3β

HI = 13

NH = 20

0.25

(0.16)

0.13

(0.08)

P < 0.05

0.28

(0.14)

0.09

(0.09)

P < 0.001

0.31

(0.22)

0.08

(0.10)

P < 0.05

0.36

(0.14)

0.07

(0.07)

P < 0.001

HI = 33

NH = 20

0.14

(0.20)

0.00

P < 0.001

D4?

HI = 13

NH = 20

0.14

(0.14)

0.23

(0.11)

P < 0.05

0.17

(0.15)

0.23

(0.11)

P > 0.05

0.28

(0.10)

0.15

(0.10)

P < 0.05

0.25

(0.10)

0.15

(0.12)

P < 0.05

HI = 33

NH = 20

0.12

(0.13)

0.00

P < 0.001

α PMLNT-easy minus PMLNT-hard

∞ PDLNT-easy minus PDLNT-hard β PMLNT-easy minus PDLNT-easy ? PMLNT-hard minus PDLNT-hard

the differences in the means of PLNTs scores in the SNR levels (-2 to 15 dB) were compared between the children with HL and those with NH by the IndependentSamples T-Test. The differences of the PLNTs’ mean scores (D) were significantly different between the two groups, including D1 = the PMLNT-easy minus the PMLNT-hard (0 and 15 dB), D2 = the PDLNT-easy minus the PDLNT-hard (0, 4, and 15 dB), D3 = the PDLNT-easy minus the PMLNT-easy (-2, 0, 2, 4, and 15 dB), and D4 = the PDLNT-hard minus the PMLNT-hard (-2, 2, 4, and 15 dB). Except for D1 (0 dB) and D4 (-2 dB), the differences in the children with HL were higher than their peers with NH. There was also a constant trend in D3 in all SNR levels.

DISCUSSION

The scores of the children with HL on all four subscales of the PLNTS (PMLNT-easy, PMLNT-hard, PDLNT-easy, and PDLNThard) were significantly less than the scores of their peers with NH (Figures 1-4). That is, the performance of the participants with HL on SWR in noise (SNR = -2 to 15 dB) was inadequate. Thus, in agreement with previous findings, school-aged children with HL experience critical difficulties in the SiN perception [6,31-38,25,27,39,40,9], specifically when they had to recognize words through auditory-only modality[41-44,24,18,45,46]. However, their SWR scores increased stepwise in the SNRs from -2 to 15 dB (Figures 1-4). Therefore, background noise should be considered a fundamental confounder affecting the listening of school-aged children with HL.

Furthermore, it should be noted that sixteen of the twenty children who used CIs could not recognize the spoken words in noise (SNR = -2 to 4 dB). More importantly, their performance was significantly lower than their peers with NH, even under optimal conditions (SNR = 15 dB). According to the findings, outcomes following cochlear implantation can be influenced by two main factors: (a) peripheral factors related to the initial sensory encoding of the speech signal into the auditory nerve and (b) central cognitive and linguistic factors such as spoken language and working memory (WM) [5-6,16,47,28,19,39,14,9]. As the PLNTs is a lexically controlled assessment toolkit independent of receptive vocabulary and spoken language competency [31,29], the lower performance of the school-aged children CIs users on SiN perception may be considered related to the semantic context O’Neill et al. [48], and WM Leibold & Buss et al. [47], as the other “top-down” processing factors. But, the words of the PLNTs were lexically adjusted for children [31,29].

Thus, the participants’ poor performance may not be explained by the semantic context. In addition, according to the recent evidence on the relationship between WM and SiN perception, WM capacity was not associated with SiN performance [49], memory span did not predict variance in SiN perception [13], and cognitive training to improve WM capacity did not promote the SiN performance of children with CIs [28].

Therefore, it seems that we should look for the cause of the participants’ SiN performance insufficiency in other contributing factors, including (I) poor resolving capabilities of the CI device as poor “bottom-up” processing factor [9] (II) subcortical spectrotemporal representation of speech Anderson & Kraus et al. [50], and (III) personal background factors such as the age of HL, use of residual hearing, mode of communication, and age at implantation [51,13,15,19,52].

Besides, the mean scores of the PLNTs were significantly different between the children with HL and those with NH. Although, D2 (the PDLNT-easy minus the PDLNT-hard) (0, 4, and 15 dB) and D4 (the PDLNT-hard minus the PMLNT-hard) (2, 4, and 15 dB) in the children with HL were higher than those with NH, a constant trend observed in D3 (the PDLNT-easy minus the PMLNT-easy) (-2, 0, 2, 4, and 15 dB). In addition, we did not observe the same result related to D1 (the PMLNT-easy minus the PMLNT-hard). In other words, the CIs/HAs users’ scores on the PLNTs were assigned to the PDLNT-easy, the PDLNThard, the PMLNT-easy, and the PMLNT-hard from maximum to minimum. Therefore, although word length is an essential factor in recognizing a word both in school-aged children with HL and their peers with NH [53,36,29], similar to preschoolaged children with and without HL [24,25,27], it can be assumed that length cues, as well as spectral information in recognizing the words, were more fundamental in the children with HL than those with NH.

Therefore, similar to the school-aged children with NH, the school-aged children with HL used: (a) structural information related to familiar words organized into similar neighborhoods in long-term memory to recognize spoken words [53,36,24,25,27,29] and (b) length cues as well as spectral information in recognizing the words due to their significantly better performance in the disyllabic word recognition compared to the monosyllabic one [53,36,24,25,27,29].

Consequently, the study’s findings confirmed not only our assumption that Persian school-aged children with HL have SiN perception insufficiency but also emphasized a critical condition for them to listen to spectrally degraded speech in noisy environments such as home, school, and classroom. 

Further, the findings showed that the PLNTs, as a lexically controlled assessment toolkit, can differentiate the performance of Persian school-aged children with HL and those with NH on SiN perception.

CONCLUSIONS

Persian school-aged children with HL experience a critical condition related to listening spectrally degraded speech in noisy environments such as home, school, and classroom due to SiN perception insufficiency. Accordingly, they may be at risk of literacy difficulties. Therefore, it is suggested that SiN perception in school-aged CIs users be systematically assessed and monitored through valid tests to manage their listening problems in situations with background noise.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The author would like to thank M. Vahab for her valuable general assistance and Dr. Z. Shayan for her careful statistical advice. Special thanks are expressed to the families and children who participated in the research. 

REFERENCES
  1. Mishra SK, Boddupally SP. Auditory cognitive training for pediatric cochlear implant recipients. Ear Hear. 2018; 39: 48-59.
  2.   Nandurkar AN, Venugopal K, Arya R. Sentence recognition in quiet and noise in school-going indian children using bimodal hearing. Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2019; 71: 1442-1448.
  3. Bugannim Y, Roth DA, Zechoval D, Kishon-Rabin L. Training of speech perception in noise in pre-lingual hearing impaired adults with cochlear implants compared with normal hearing adults. Otol Neurotol. 2019; 40: e316-e325.
  4. Caldwell A, Nittrouer S. Speech perception in noise by children with cochlear implants. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2013; 56: 13-30.
  5. Ching TY, Zhang VW, Flynn C, Burns L, Button L, Hou S, McGhie K, Van Buynder P. Factors influencing speech perception in noise for 5-year- old children using hearing aids or cochlear implants. Int J Audiol. 2018; 57: S70-S80.
  6. Eisenberg LS, Fisher LM, Johnson KC, Ganguly DH, Grace T, Niparko JK, Team CDI. Sentence recognition in quiet and noise by pediatric cochlear implant users: Relationships to spoken language. Otol Neurotol. 2016; 37: e75-81.
  7. Kral A, Dorman MF, Wilson BS. Neuronal development of hearing and language: cochlear implants and critical periods. Annu Rev Neurosci. 2019; 42: e65.
  8. Ren C, Yang J, Zha D, Lin Y, Liu H, Kong Y, Liu S, Xu L. Spoken word recognition in noise in Mandarin-speaking pediatric cochlear implant users. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2018; 113: 124-130.
  9. Zaltz Y, Bugannim Y, Zechoval D, Kishon-Rabin L, Perez R. Listening in noise remains a significant challenge for cochlear implant users: Evidence from early deafened and those with progressive hearing loss compared to peers with normal hearing. J Clin Med. 2020; 9: 1381.
  10. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Purdy SC, Vahab M, Rasouli J, Vasfinia M, Lotf E. Translation and Adaptation of the Auditory Behavior in Everyday Life (ABEL) Questionnaire into Persian: A Pilot Study. JRSR. 2015; 3: 63- 67.
  11. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Vahab M, Purdy SC. The Persian version of the auditory behavior in everyday life questionnaire. Int J School Health. 2018; 5: e55952.
  12. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Mohammadi T, Mohammadi Z, Vahab M. Predictive Factors of Language Development in Persian-speaking Children Using Cochlear Implants: A Pilot Study. JRSR. 2021; 8: 126- 131.
  13. Torkildsen JVK, Hitchins A, Myhrum M, Wie OB. Speech-in-noise perception in children with cochlear implants, hearing aids, developmental language disorder and typical development: The effects of linguistic and cognitive abilities. Front Psychol. 2019; 10: 2530.
  14. Sullivan JR, Osman H, Schafer EC. The effect of noise on the relationship between auditory working memory and comprehension in school- aged children. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2015; 58: 1043-1051.
  15. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Vahab M. Oral-Language Skills of the Iranian Pupils With Hearing-Impairment. Int J School Health, 2015; 2.
  16. Hick CB, Tharpe AM. Listening effort and fatigue in school-aged children with and without hearing loss. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2002; 45: 573-584.
  17. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Hasanzadeh S, Rahgozar M, Shemshadi H, Purdy SC, Mahmudi Bakhtiari B, Vahab M. Comparing the effect of auditory- only and auditory-visual modes in two groups of Persian children using cochlear implants: a randomized clinical trial. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2013; 77: 1545-1550.
  18. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Vahab M, Bazrafkan M, Haghjoo A. Audiovisual spoken word recognition as a clinical criterion for sensory aids efficiency in Persian-language children with hearing loss. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2015; 79: 2424-2427.
  19. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Vahab M, Rahimi Z, Mayahi A. Audiovisual sentence repetition as a clinical criterion for auditory development in Persian-language children with hearing loss. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2017; 93: 167-171.
  20. Davidson LS, Geers AE, Uchanski RM, Firszt JB. Effects of early acoustic hearing on speech perception and language for pediatric cochlear implant recipients. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2019; 62: 3620- 3637.
  21. Goldsworthy RL, Markle KL. Pediatric hearing loss and speech recognition in quiet and in different types of background noise. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2019; 62: 758-767.
  22. Emami SF. Comparison of cochlear implants with hearing aids regarding word recognition score in the presence of white noise. Avicenna J Clin Med. 2020; 27: 171-177.
  23. Mehrkian S, Bayat Z, Javanbakht M, Emamdjomeh H, Bakhshi E. Effect of wireless remote microphone application on speech discrimination in noise in children with cochlear implants. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2019; 125: 192-195.
  24. Oryadi Zanjani MM. Assessment of auditory-only and audiovisual word-in-noise recognition in preschool-aged children with and without hearing loss using lexically controlled tests: Optimal execution conditions. IJRP. 2023; 130: 347-360.
  25. Oryadi Zanjani MM. Lexical effects on spoken word recognition inpreschool-aged children with normal hearing. IJRP. 2023; 128: 589-595.
  26. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Vahab M. Lexical effects on spoken word recognition in children with hearing impairment: Test-Retest Reliability of the Persian Lexical Neighborhood Tests. JRSR. 2021; 8: 169-175.
  27. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Vahab M. Speech-in-noise perception in preschool-aged children with hearing loss compared to their peers with normal hearing. IJRP. 2023; 128: 81-95.
  28. Oryadi Zanjani MM. A systematic review of speech recognition assessment tools for Persian-speaking children with and without hearing disorders. JRSR. 2022; 9: 143-150.
  29. Oryadi Zanjani MM, Zamani A. Development of Persian lexical neighborhood tests. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2020; 139: 110406.
  30. Lotfi Y, Salim S, Mehrkian S, Ahmadi T, Biglarian A. The Persian version of words-in-noise test for young population: development and validation. Aud Vest Res. 2016; 25: 194-200.
  31. Eisenberg LS, Martinez AS, Holowecky SR, Pogorelsky S. Recognition of lexically controlled words and sentences by children with normal hearing and children with cochlear implants. Ear Hear. 2002; 23: 450-462.
  32. Gifford RH, Olund AP, DeJong M. Improving speech perception in noise for children with cochlear implants. J Am Acad Audiol. 2011; 22: 623-632.
  33. Kirk KI, Eisenberg LS, Martinez AS, Hay-McCutcheon M. The lexical neighborhood test: Test-retest reliability and inter-list equivalency (No. 22(1998).
  34. Kirk KI, Hay-McCutcheon M, Sehgal ST, Miyamoto RT. Speech perception in children with cochlear implants: effects of lexical difficulty, talker variability, and word length. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol Suppl. 2000; 185: 79-81.
  35. Kirk KI, Hudgins M. Speech perception and spoken word recognition in children with cochlear implants. In N. M. Young & K. I. Kirk (Eds.), Pediatric Cochlear Implantation. 2016; 145-161.
  36. Kirk KI, Pisoni DB, Osberger MJ. Lexical effects on spoken word recognition by pediatric cochlear implant users. Ear Hear. 1995; 16: 470-481.
  37. Lee Y, Sim H. Bilateral cochlear implantation versus unilateral cochlear implantation in deaf children: Effects of sentence context and listening conditions on recognition of spoken words in sentences. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2020; 137: 110237.
  38.   Liu H, Liu S, Wang S, Liu C, Kong Y, Zhang N, Li S, Yang Y, Han D, Zhang L. Effects of lexical characteristics and demographic factors on mandarin chinese open-set word recognition in children with cochlear implants. Ear Hear. 2013; 34: 221-228.
  39. Pisoni DB, RE Remez. Speech perception in deaf children with cochlear implants. The handbook of speech perception Blackwell Publishing. 2009; 494-523.
  40. Wang NM, Wu CM, Kirk KI. Lexical effects on spoken word recognition performance among Mandarin-speaking children with normal hearing and cochlear implants. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2010; 74: 883-890.
  41. Holt R, Kirk KI, Hay-McCutcheon M. Assessing multimodal spoken word-in-sentence recognition in children with normal hearing and children with cochlear implants. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2011; 54: 632-657.
  42. Kirk KI, Hay-McCutcheon MJ, Holt RF, Gao S, Qi R, Gehrlein BL. Audiovisual spoken word recognition by children with cochlear implants. Audiol Med. 2007; 5: 250-261.
  43. Kirk KI, Prusick L, French B, Gotch C, Eisenberg LS, Young N. Assessing spoken word recognition in children who are deaf or hard of hearing: A translational approach. J Am Acad Audiol. 2012; 23: 464-475.
  44. Lachs L, Pisoni DB, Kirk KI. Use of audiovisual information in speech perception by prelingually deaf children with cochlear implants: A first report. Ear Hear. 2001; 22: 236-251.
  45.   Oryadi Zanjani MM, Vahab M, Rahimi Z, Mayahi A. Audiovisual sentence repetition as a clinical criterion for auditory development in Persian-language children with hearing loss. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2017; 93: 167-171.
  46. Tye-Murray N, Sommers M, Spehar B. Auditory and visual lexical neighborhoods in audiovisual speech perception. Trends Amplif. 2007; 11: 233-241.
  47. Leibold L J, Buss E. Masked speech recognition in school-aged children. Front Psychol. 2019; 10: 1981.
  48. O’Neill E R, Kreft H A, Oxenham A J. Cognitive factors contribute to speech perception in cochlear-implant users and age-matched normal-hearing listeners under vocoded conditions. J Acoust Soc Am. 2019; 146: 195.
  49. Magimairaj BM, Nagaraj NK, Benafield NJ. Children’s speech perception in noise: Evidence for dissociation from language and working memory. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2018; 61: 1294-1305.
  50. Anderson S, Kraus N. Sensory-cognitive interaction in the neural encoding of speech in noise: A review. J Am Acad Audiol. 2020; 21: 575-585.
  51. Cejas I, Mitchell CM, Hoffman M, Quittner AL. Comparisons of iq in children with and without cochlear implants: Longitudinal findings and associations with language. Ear Hear. 2018; 39: 1187-1198.
  52. Rönnberg J, Lunner T, Zekveld A, Sörqvist P, Danielsson H, Lyxell B, et al. The ease of language understanding (ELU) model: Theoretical, empirical, and clinical advances. Front Syst Neurosci. 2013; 7: 31.
  53. Cluff MS, Luce PA. Similarity neighborhoods of spoken two-syllable words: retroactive effects on multiple activation. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 1990; 16: 551-563.

Oryadi-Zanjani MM, Vahab M (2023) Speech-in-Noise Recognition in School-Aged Children with Hearing Loss: Evidence of a Critical Condition. Ann Otolaryngol Rhinol 10(4): 1324.

Received : 29 Nov 2023
Accepted : 27 Dec 2023
Published : 29 Dec 2023
Journals
JSM Schizophrenia
Launched : 2016
Journal of Nausea
Launched : 2020
JSM Internal Medicine
Launched : 2016
JSM Hepatitis
Launched : 2016
JSM Oro Facial Surgeries
ISSN : 2578-3211
Launched : 2016
Journal of Human Nutrition and Food Science
ISSN : 2333-6706
Launched : 2013
JSM Regenerative Medicine and Bioengineering
ISSN : 2379-0490
Launched : 2013
JSM Spine
ISSN : 2578-3181
Launched : 2016
Archives of Palliative Care
ISSN : 2573-1165
Launched : 2016
JSM Nutritional Disorders
ISSN : 2578-3203
Launched : 2017
Annals of Neurodegenerative Disorders
ISSN : 2476-2032
Launched : 2016
Journal of Fever
ISSN : 2641-7782
Launched : 2017
JSM Bone Marrow Research
ISSN : 2578-3351
Launched : 2016
JSM Mathematics and Statistics
ISSN : 2578-3173
Launched : 2014
Journal of Autoimmunity and Research
ISSN : 2573-1173
Launched : 2014
JSM Arthritis
ISSN : 2475-9155
Launched : 2016
JSM Head and Neck Cancer-Cases and Reviews
ISSN : 2573-1610
Launched : 2016
JSM General Surgery Cases and Images
ISSN : 2573-1564
Launched : 2016
JSM Anatomy and Physiology
ISSN : 2573-1262
Launched : 2016
JSM Dental Surgery
ISSN : 2573-1548
Launched : 2016
Annals of Emergency Surgery
ISSN : 2573-1017
Launched : 2016
Annals of Mens Health and Wellness
ISSN : 2641-7707
Launched : 2017
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Health Care
ISSN : 2576-0084
Launched : 2018
Journal of Chronic Diseases and Management
ISSN : 2573-1300
Launched : 2016
Annals of Vaccines and Immunization
ISSN : 2378-9379
Launched : 2014
JSM Heart Surgery Cases and Images
ISSN : 2578-3157
Launched : 2016
Annals of Reproductive Medicine and Treatment
ISSN : 2573-1092
Launched : 2016
JSM Brain Science
ISSN : 2573-1289
Launched : 2016
JSM Biomarkers
ISSN : 2578-3815
Launched : 2014
JSM Biology
ISSN : 2475-9392
Launched : 2016
Archives of Stem Cell and Research
ISSN : 2578-3580
Launched : 2014
Annals of Clinical and Medical Microbiology
ISSN : 2578-3629
Launched : 2014
JSM Pediatric Surgery
ISSN : 2578-3149
Launched : 2017
Journal of Memory Disorder and Rehabilitation
ISSN : 2578-319X
Launched : 2016
JSM Tropical Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2578-3165
Launched : 2016
JSM Head and Face Medicine
ISSN : 2578-3793
Launched : 2016
JSM Cardiothoracic Surgery
ISSN : 2573-1297
Launched : 2016
JSM Bone and Joint Diseases
ISSN : 2578-3351
Launched : 2017
JSM Bioavailability and Bioequivalence
ISSN : 2641-7812
Launched : 2017
JSM Atherosclerosis
ISSN : 2573-1270
Launched : 2016
Journal of Genitourinary Disorders
ISSN : 2641-7790
Launched : 2017
Journal of Fractures and Sprains
ISSN : 2578-3831
Launched : 2016
Journal of Autism and Epilepsy
ISSN : 2641-7774
Launched : 2016
Annals of Marine Biology and Research
ISSN : 2573-105X
Launched : 2014
JSM Health Education & Primary Health Care
ISSN : 2578-3777
Launched : 2016
JSM Communication Disorders
ISSN : 2578-3807
Launched : 2016
Annals of Musculoskeletal Disorders
ISSN : 2578-3599
Launched : 2016
Annals of Virology and Research
ISSN : 2573-1122
Launched : 2014
JSM Renal Medicine
ISSN : 2573-1637
Launched : 2016
Journal of Muscle Health
ISSN : 2578-3823
Launched : 2016
JSM Genetics and Genomics
ISSN : 2334-1823
Launched : 2013
JSM Anxiety and Depression
ISSN : 2475-9139
Launched : 2016
Clinical Journal of Heart Diseases
ISSN : 2641-7766
Launched : 2016
Annals of Medicinal Chemistry and Research
ISSN : 2378-9336
Launched : 2014
JSM Pain and Management
ISSN : 2578-3378
Launched : 2016
JSM Women's Health
ISSN : 2578-3696
Launched : 2016
Clinical Research in HIV or AIDS
ISSN : 2374-0094
Launched : 2013
Journal of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Obesity
ISSN : 2333-6692
Launched : 2013
Journal of Substance Abuse and Alcoholism
ISSN : 2373-9363
Launched : 2013
JSM Neurosurgery and Spine
ISSN : 2373-9479
Launched : 2013
Journal of Liver and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2379-0830
Launched : 2014
Journal of Drug Design and Research
ISSN : 2379-089X
Launched : 2014
JSM Clinical Oncology and Research
ISSN : 2373-938X
Launched : 2013
JSM Bioinformatics, Genomics and Proteomics
ISSN : 2576-1102
Launched : 2014
JSM Chemistry
ISSN : 2334-1831
Launched : 2013
Journal of Trauma and Care
ISSN : 2573-1246
Launched : 2014
JSM Surgical Oncology and Research
ISSN : 2578-3688
Launched : 2016
Annals of Food Processing and Preservation
ISSN : 2573-1033
Launched : 2016
Journal of Radiology and Radiation Therapy
ISSN : 2333-7095
Launched : 2013
JSM Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
ISSN : 2578-3572
Launched : 2016
Annals of Clinical Pathology
ISSN : 2373-9282
Launched : 2013
Annals of Cardiovascular Diseases
ISSN : 2641-7731
Launched : 2016
Journal of Behavior
ISSN : 2576-0076
Launched : 2016
Annals of Clinical and Experimental Metabolism
ISSN : 2572-2492
Launched : 2016
Clinical Research in Infectious Diseases
ISSN : 2379-0636
Launched : 2013
JSM Microbiology
ISSN : 2333-6455
Launched : 2013
Journal of Urology and Research
ISSN : 2379-951X
Launched : 2014
Journal of Family Medicine and Community Health
ISSN : 2379-0547
Launched : 2013
Annals of Pregnancy and Care
ISSN : 2578-336X
Launched : 2017
JSM Cell and Developmental Biology
ISSN : 2379-061X
Launched : 2013
Annals of Aquaculture and Research
ISSN : 2379-0881
Launched : 2014
Clinical Research in Pulmonology
ISSN : 2333-6625
Launched : 2013
Journal of Immunology and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2333-6714
Launched : 2013
Annals of Forensic Research and Analysis
ISSN : 2378-9476
Launched : 2014
JSM Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
ISSN : 2333-7109
Launched : 2013
Annals of Breast Cancer Research
ISSN : 2641-7685
Launched : 2016
Annals of Gerontology and Geriatric Research
ISSN : 2378-9409
Launched : 2014
Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders
ISSN : 2379-0822
Launched : 2014
JSM Burns and Trauma
ISSN : 2475-9406
Launched : 2016
Chemical Engineering and Process Techniques
ISSN : 2333-6633
Launched : 2013
Annals of Clinical Cytology and Pathology
ISSN : 2475-9430
Launched : 2014
JSM Allergy and Asthma
ISSN : 2573-1254
Launched : 2016
Journal of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
ISSN : 2334-2307
Launched : 2013
Annals of Sports Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2379-0571
Launched : 2014
JSM Sexual Medicine
ISSN : 2578-3718
Launched : 2016
Annals of Vascular Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2378-9344
Launched : 2014
JSM Biotechnology and Biomedical Engineering
ISSN : 2333-7117
Launched : 2013
Journal of Hematology and Transfusion
ISSN : 2333-6684
Launched : 2013
JSM Environmental Science and Ecology
ISSN : 2333-7141
Launched : 2013
Journal of Cardiology and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2333-6676
Launched : 2013
JSM Nanotechnology and Nanomedicine
ISSN : 2334-1815
Launched : 2013
Journal of Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders
ISSN : 2475-9473
Launched : 2016
JSM Ophthalmology
ISSN : 2333-6447
Launched : 2013
Journal of Pharmacology and Clinical Toxicology
ISSN : 2333-7079
Launched : 2013
Annals of Psychiatry and Mental Health
ISSN : 2374-0124
Launched : 2013
Medical Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
ISSN : 2333-6439
Launched : 2013
Annals of Pediatrics and Child Health
ISSN : 2373-9312
Launched : 2013
JSM Clinical Pharmaceutics
ISSN : 2379-9498
Launched : 2014
JSM Foot and Ankle
ISSN : 2475-9112
Launched : 2016
JSM Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementia
ISSN : 2378-9565
Launched : 2014
Journal of Addiction Medicine and Therapy
ISSN : 2333-665X
Launched : 2013
Journal of Veterinary Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2378-931X
Launched : 2013
Annals of Public Health and Research
ISSN : 2378-9328
Launched : 2014
Annals of Orthopedics and Rheumatology
ISSN : 2373-9290
Launched : 2013
Journal of Clinical Nephrology and Research
ISSN : 2379-0652
Launched : 2014
Annals of Community Medicine and Practice
ISSN : 2475-9465
Launched : 2014
Annals of Biometrics and Biostatistics
ISSN : 2374-0116
Launched : 2013
JSM Clinical Case Reports
ISSN : 2373-9819
Launched : 2013
Journal of Cancer Biology and Research
ISSN : 2373-9436
Launched : 2013
Journal of Surgery and Transplantation Science
ISSN : 2379-0911
Launched : 2013
Journal of Dermatology and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2373-9371
Launched : 2013
JSM Gastroenterology and Hepatology
ISSN : 2373-9487
Launched : 2013
Annals of Nursing and Practice
ISSN : 2379-9501
Launched : 2014
JSM Dentistry
ISSN : 2333-7133
Launched : 2013
Author Information X