Hearing Impairment Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Computer-Assisted Speech Training on Speech Recognition and Subjective Benefits for Hearing Aid Users With Severe to Profound Prelingual Hearing Loss
Computer-assisted speech training is a speech recognition training system developed for cochlear implant users. With minimal facilities and skills, cochlear implant users can conduct this training at home. The purpose of this study was to apply this system to adolescent and young adult hearing aid users with prelingual severe to profound hearing loss.
Introduction Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a disability affecting people worldwide,
and the prevalence is expected to increase due to prolonged life expectancy. SNHL has a
significant negative impact on the quality of life, especially in prelingually deafened
children. Except for certain diseases such as sudden deafness or endolymphatic hydrops,
which may be treated or alleviated by medication or surgery, most patients with SNHL have to
wear hearing aids or undergo cochlear implantation to regain hearing. However, for many
individuals these measures do not satisfactorily resolve communication problems, because
hearing is only the first step in a series of events leading to communication. Between
hearing and communication lie the important skills of listening and comprehension, and to
achieve successful communication it has been suggested that patients receiving amplification
should be offered some type of audiological rehabilitation. It has been reported that older
subjects do not spontaneously acclimatize to wearing a hearing aid, or that the effects are
either small or nonexistent, which emphasizes the importance of rehabilitation after wearing
a hearing aid. Unfortunately, not everyone with SNHL in Taiwan receives this kind of
rehabilitation. The reasons for this may be: (a) methods of rehabilitation are not familiar
to all clinicians or speech pathologists; (b) there is a shortage of clinicians or speech
pathologists to provide such time-consuming rehabilitation; (c) hearing impaired patients
may be unable to afford or are unwilling to dedicate time to rehabilitation; and (d) it is
difficult to measure the improvements provided by rehabilitation.
Recently, rehabilitative training procedures have been garnering interest due to
technological advances enabling a hearing aid user to perform the procedures while at home
using a personal computer. Burk et al trained young normal-hearing and older
hearing-impaired listeners with digitally recorded training materials using a computer. The
results showed that older hearing-impaired listeners were able to significantly improve
their word-recognition abilities through training with one talker, and to some degree
achieve the same level as young normal-hearing listeners. In addition, the improved
performance was maintained across talkers and across time.
The computer-aided speechreading training (CAST) system was developed to simulate a
face-to-face training intervention and was designed to be one component of a comprehensive
aural rehabilitation program for preretirement adults with acquired mild-to-moderate hearing
loss. The aim of the training was to enhance speechreading skills to complement auditory
speech perception. Throughout the training, the learner views a monitor that shows either a
computer-generated screen or a videotaped recording of the teacher. CAST was designed to be
used by a clinician to extend rather than to replace existing rehabilitative techniques.
Computer-based training has also been applied to the rehabilitation of cochlear implant
users. Before the development of computer-based training, some studies assessed the effects
of limited training on the speech-recognition skills of poorer-performing cochlear implant
users. Busby et al conducted ten 1-hour speech perception and production training sessions,
and the results demonstrated minimal changes in perceptual abilities in three cochlear
implant users. Dawson and Clark conducted one 50-minute training session per week for 10
weeks, and four of five subjects showed some measure of improvement. The limited success of
these attempts to improve the speech-recognition abilities of cochlear implant users was
thought to be due to an inadequate amount of training. More intensive training of cochlear
implant users was predicted to be effective, because in normal hearing populations training
has been shown to successfully improve speech segment discrimination and identification, and
recognition on spectrally shifted speech. Fu et al reported encouraging results in the
rehabilitation of cochlear implant users using a computer-assisted speech training system
which they also called CAST, although this was different to the CAST system of
Pichora-Fuller and Benguerel. The CAST system of Fu et al, developed at the House Ear
Institute, contains a large database of training materials and can be installed on personal
computers, and so with minimal facilities and skills, cochlear implant users can conduct the
training at home, and clinicians or speech pathologists can monitor the subject's test score
and training progress. The results demonstrated that after moderate amounts of training (1
hour per day, 5 days per week), all 10 postlingually deafened adult cochlear implant users
in the study had significant improvements in vowel and consonant-recognition scores. Wu et
al applied the CAST system to 10 Mandarin-speaking children (three hearing aid users and
seven cochlear implant users). After training for half an hour a day, 5 days a week, for a
period of 10 weeks, the subjects showed significant improvements in vowel, consonant and
Chinese tone performance. This improved performance was largely retained for 2 months after
the training had been completed. Stacey and Summerfield also used computer-based auditory
training to improve the perception of noise. The results confirmed that the training helped
to overcome the effects of spectral distortions in speech, and the training materials were
most effective when several talkers were included.
Based on these previous studies, cochlear implant users can improve their speech recognition
ability after training with a CAST system. If this system is also effective for hearing aid
users, and especially prelingually deafened patients, the CAST system will have a
substantially positive impact, as there are many more hearing aid users than cochlear
implant users.
The purpose of this study was to train prelingually deafened adolescents and young adults
with CAST and measure the benefits objectively and subjectively. The objective benefits were
measured using published speech recognition tests [13], and the subjective benefits were
measured using client-oriented scale of improvement (COSI).
Materials and Methods Subjects Fifteen hearing aid users with prelingual severe to profound
hearing loss participated in this study. Another six hearing aid users with a similar age
and hearing average were included as the control group. The inclusion criteria for the study
subjects and controls were: (1) age above 15 years; (2) wearing a hearing aid for at least
for 2 years after hearing loss was diagnosed; (3) basic ability to operate a computer; (4)
Mandarin Chinese speaker; and (5) motivation to undertake the training program. The
exclusion criteria were: (1) aided hearing average worse than 70 dBHL; (2) unable to operate
a computer. Before training with CAST, all participants received unaided and aided sound
field audiometry. Table 1 shows the basic information of the 21 participants.
Client-oriented scale of improvement (COSI) We use a COSI questionnaire to evaluate
subjective benefits. Before training with the CAST system, both the training and control
groups were asked to identify up five specific situations in which they would like to cope
better. At the end of the training, for each situation they were asked (A) how much better
(or worse) they could now hear, and (B) how well they were now able to cope. For scaling
purposes, the responses were assigned scores from 1 to 5, with 5 corresponding to "much
better" and "almost always", 4 corresponding to "better" and "most of the time", 3
corresponding to "slightly better" and "half the time", 2 corresponding to "no difference"
and "occasionally", and 1 corresponding to "worse" and "hardly ever", for questions A and B,
respectively. Question A was defined as an "improvement", and question B was defined as
"final ability". The total scores of the five situations were compared between the training
and control groups.
Test materials and procedures The speech recognition test materials including monosyllabic
words, disyllabic spondee words, vowels, consonants and Chinese tone recognition tests were
recorded onto a CD-ROM at Melody Medical Instruments Corp. by a male and female speaker. The
test materials were displayed on a laptop computer connected to a GSI 61TM clinical
audiometer (Grason-Stadler, USA) at an output level of 70 dBHL. The testing procedure was
performed in a double-walled, sound-treated room.
Monosyllabic Chinese word recognition test materials included four blocks of 25 Chinese
words. For each speech recognition test, 50 words were selected resulting in a set of 50
tokens. After a monosyllabic Chinese word was displayed, the participants were asked to
write down the word. Four different sets of open-set tests were generated for each speech
recognition test. Disyllabic Chinese spondee-word recognition test materials included two
blocks of Chinese spondee-words, each block containing 36 Chinese spondee-words. For each
speech recognition test, one block was selected resulting in a set of 36 tokens. After a
Chinese spondee-word was displayed, the participants were asked to write down the word. Four
different sets of open-set test were generated via changing the order of the materials for
each speech recognition test.
Vowel recognition test materials included 16 Chinese words. Vowel recognition was measured
using a 4-alternative, forced-choice procedure in which Chinese characters were shown on the
choice list. For each speech recognition test, the order of the words was changed. Thus,
four different sets of closed-set tests were generated. Consonant recognition test materials
included 21 Chinese words. Consonant recognition was measured using a 4-alternative,
forced-choice procedure in which a Chinese character was shown on the choice list. For each
speech recognition test, the order of the words was changed, and thus four different sets of
closed-set tests were generated. Chinese tone recognition test materials included 50
Mandarin Chinese words. The participants were asked to write down the Chinese tone (tone: 1:
flat; 2: rising; 3: falling-rising; 4: falling) after the Chinese word was displayed. For
each speech recognition test, the order of the words was changed, and thus four different
sets of open-set tests were generated.
Before training, both groups underwent a series of speech recognition tests as baseline
data. The training group then started training whereas the control group did not receive any
training. Every 4 weeks, the participants returned to the lab for another series of speech
recognition tests using different test materials. Every participant had received a total of
four speech recognition tests by the end of the study.
Training tools and procedures CAST software developed at the House Ear Institute and
distributed by Melody Medical Instrument Corp. was used as the training tool. The training
group was instructed to train at home following the program for at least 1 hour per day, 3
days a week, for 12 successive weeks. The control group did not receive any training and
returned to the lab every 4 weeks for speech recognition tests. For each participant in the
training group, a baseline speech recognition test was performed after the software had been
installed into his or her personal computer. The results were analyzed by the software which
then automatically generated a targeted training program. The software contained a large
amount of information including pure tone, vowel recognition, consonant recognition, tone
recognition, speaker recognition, environmental sounds, occasional words and occasional
sentences. The subjects were asked to focus on pure tone, vowel recognition, consonant
recognition and tone recognition training. The subjects started the training at a level
generated by the computer software. There were usually five levels of difficulty in each
training category, and each level consisted of several training sessions. For pure tone
recognition training, the subjects were asked to choose the sound different to the others.
Visual feedback was provided as to whether the response was correct or incorrect. After a
training session had been completed, the score was calculated. If the score exceeded 80, the
training proceeded to a higher level. If the score did not exceed 80, the training session
was repeated until the score exceeded 80. At a higher level of training sessions, the
differences between speech features in the response choices were reduced. For vowel
recognition training, the subjects were asked to choose the vowel different to the others.
After the subjects had progressed beyond the 3-alternative forced-choice discrimination
task, they were trained to identify final vowels. Similar training procedures were used for
consonant and tone recognition training.
Each subject in the training group was asked to register on the Melody Medical Instrument
Corp. website, and his or her username and password were provided to us. Therefore, we were
able to monitor the total time spent training, and the training time and score for each
exercise. If the subjects did not reach the required amount of time and training sessions,
we contacted their family and encouraged them to do more training.
Statistical methods All statistical analyses were performed with SAS software (Version
9.1.3, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, U.S.A.) and R software (Version 2.7). Two-sided p
values of 0.05 or less were considered to be statistically significant. Continuous data were
expressed as mean ± standard deviation (SD) unless otherwise specified. Percentages were
calculated for categorical variables. Two-sample t tests or Wilcoxon rank-sum tests were
used to compare the means or medians of continuous data between two groups, whereas the
chi-squared test or Fisher's exact test was used to analyze categorical proportions between
two groups.
In addition to univariate analyses, the data of the five speech recognition tests were
analyzed by fitting multiple marginal linear regression models using generalized estimating
equations. If the first-order autocorrelation (i.e., AR(1)) structure fit the repeated
measures data well, the model-based standard error estimates were used in the generalized
estimating equations analysis; otherwise, the empirical standard error estimates were
reported. In addition, the data of COSI were analyzed by fitting multiple linear regression
models.
Basic model-fitting techniques for variable selection, goodness-of-fit assessment, and
regression diagnostics were used in our regression analyses to ensure the quality of the
results. In stepwise variable selection, all of the univariate significant and
non-significant covariates were considered, and both the significance levels for entry and
for stay were set to 0.15 or larger. The goodness-of-fit measure, the coefficient of
determination (R2), was computed for all of the linear regression models, which is the
square of the correlation between the observed response variable and the predicted value. It
had a value between 0 and 1, with a larger value indicating a better fit of the multiple
linear regression model to the observed continuous data. In addition, the variance inflation
factor was examined to detect potential multicollinearity problems (defined as a value ≥
10).
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Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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