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posted by janrinok on Thursday October 20 2016, @01:25AM   Printer-friendly
from the what? dept.

"Could you repeat that?" The reason you may have to say something twice when talking to older family members at Thanksgiving dinner may not be because of their hearing. Researchers at the University of Maryland have determined that something is going on in the brains of typical older adults that causes them to struggle to follow speech amidst background noise, even when their hearing would be considered normal on a clinical assessment.

In an interdisciplinary study published by the Journal of Neurophysiology, researchers Samira Anderson, Jonathan Z. Simon, and Alessandro Presacco found that adults aged 61-73 with normal hearing scored significantly worse on speech understanding in noisy environments than adults aged 18-30 with normal hearing. The researchers are all associated with the UMD's Brain and Behavior Initiative.
...
Why is this the case? "Part of the comprehension problems experienced by older adults in both quiet and noise conditions could be linked to age-related imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory neural processes in the brain," Presacco said. "This imbalance could impair the brain's ability to correctly process auditory stimuli and could be the main cause of the abnormally high cortical response observed in our study."

In short, they think signal processing is to blame, not signal transmission.


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  • (Score: 2) by jdavidb on Thursday October 20 2016, @01:49PM

    by jdavidb (5690) on Thursday October 20 2016, @01:49PM (#416652) Homepage Journal
    I have the same problem. I've noticed it since my early 30s, and I suspect it was going on long before that. At some point I read an article suggesting that certain types of ocd-like personalities might be more likely to suffer from this problem, and that definitely describes me. There's also a small handful of noises I can hear that most people can't. (But they are mostly generated by CRTs, so I don't hear them much any more.)
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