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Journal ArticleDOI

Background Noise Degrades Central Auditory Processing in Toddlers.

TLDR
The results imply that speech processing of toddlers, who may spend long periods of daytime in noisy conditions, is vulnerable to background noise and special attention should be paid to acoustic conditions and background noise levels in children’s daily environments to ensure a propitious setting for linguistic development.
Abstract
Objectives Noise, as an unwanted sound, has become one of modern society's environmental conundrums, and many children are exposed to higher noise levels than previously assumed. However, the effects of background noise on central auditory processing of toddlers, who are still acquiring language skills, have so far not been determined. The authors evaluated the effects of background noise on toddlers' speech-sound processing by recording event-related brain potentials. The hypothesis was that background noise modulates neural speech-sound encoding and degrades speech-sound discrimination. Design Obligatory P1 and N2 responses for standard syllables and the mismatch negativity (MMN) response for five different syllable deviants presented in a linguistic multifeature paradigm were recorded in silent and background noise conditions. The participants were 18 typically developing 22- to 26-month-old monolingual children with healthy ears. Results The results showed that the P1 amplitude was smaller and the N2 amplitude larger in the noisy conditions compared with the silent conditions. In the noisy condition, the MMN was absent for the intensity and vowel changes and diminished for the consonant, frequency, and vowel duration changes embedded in speech syllables. Furthermore, the frontal MMN component was attenuated in the noisy condition. However, noise had no effect on P1, N2, or MMN latencies. Conclusions The results from this study suggest multiple effects of background noise on the central auditory processing of toddlers. It modulates the early stages of sound encoding and dampens neural discrimination vital for accurate speech perception. These results imply that speech processing of toddlers, who may spend long periods of daytime in noisy conditions, is vulnerable to background noise. In noisy conditions, toddlers' neural representations of some speech sounds might be weakened. Thus, special attention should be paid to acoustic conditions and background noise levels in children's daily environments, like day-care centers, to ensure a propitious setting for linguistic development. In addition, the evaluation and improvement of daily listening conditions should be an ordinary part of clinical intervention of children with linguistic problems.

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Citations
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An Introduction To The Event Related Potential Technique

Marina Schmid
TL;DR: This is an introduction to the event related potential technique, which can help people facing with some malicious bugs inside their laptop to read a good book with a cup of tea in the afternoon.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Etiology of Listening Difficulties in Noise Despite Clinically Normal Audiograms.

TL;DR: This review summarizes the possible causes of listening difficulties in noise, and examines established as well as promising new psychoacoustic and electrophysiologic approaches to differentiate between them.
Journal ArticleDOI

A window into the brain mechanisms associated with noise sensitivity

TL;DR: The results show that high noise sensitivity is associated with altered sound feature encoding and attenuated discrimination of sound noisiness in the auditory cortex, which makes a step towards objective measures of noise sensitivity instead of self-evaluation questionnaires and the development of strategies to prevent negative effects of noise on the susceptible population.
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Long-term influence of recurrent acute otitis media on neural involuntary attention switching in 2-year-old children

TL;DR: The lP3a and LN responses are affected in toddlers who have had a RAOM even when their ears are healthy, which suggests detrimental long-term effects of RAOM on the neural mechanisms of involuntary attention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural indices of phonemic discrimination and sentence-level speech intelligibility in quiet and noise: A mismatch negativity study

TL;DR: The effects of background noise on mismatch negativity (MMN) latency, amplitude, and spectral power measures as well as behavioral speech intelligibility tasks confirm the utility of MMN as an objective neural marker for understanding noise-induced variations aswell as individual differences in speech perception.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Early selective-attention effect on evoked potential reinterpreted ☆

TL;DR: The ‘Hillyard effect’ was explained as being caused by a superimposition of a CNV kind of negative shift on the evoked potential to the attended stimuli rather than by a growth of the ‘real’ N 1 component of theevoked potential.

An Introduction To The Event Related Potential Technique

Marina Schmid
TL;DR: This is an introduction to the event related potential technique, which can help people facing with some malicious bugs inside their laptop to read a good book with a cup of tea in the afternoon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Language-specific phoneme representations revealed by electric and magnetic brain responses

TL;DR: It is found that the brain's automatic change-detection response, reflected electrically as the mismatch negativity (MMN) was enhanced when the infrequent, deviant stimulus was a prototype relative to when it was a non-prototype (the Estonian /õ/).
Journal ArticleDOI

A sensitive period for the development of the central auditory system in children with cochlear implants: implications for age of implantation.

TL;DR: The data suggest that in the absence of normal stimulation there is a sensitive period of about 3.5 yr during which the human central auditory system remains maximally plastic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phonetic learning as a pathway to language: new data and native language magnet theory expanded (NLM-e)

TL;DR: It is suggested that native language phonetic performance is indicative of neural commitment to the native language, while non-native phoneticperformance reveals uncommitted neural circuitry.
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