努力听讲话时眼球运动减少

M. Cui, Björn Herrmann
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引用次数: 1

摘要

听力障碍影响了许多老年人,但通常是在嘈杂环境下的言语理解变得困难几十年后才被诊断出来的。因此,对听力努力的准确评估可能有助于及早诊断听力障碍。然而,瞳孔测量法——最常用的评估听力努力程度的方法——有局限性,阻碍了它在实践中的应用。目前的研究探索了一种通过眼球运动来评估听力努力的新方法。在认知和神经生理学的基础上,我们检验了当语音听力变得具有挑战性时眼球运动减少的假设。在对男女参与者的三个实验中,我们证明,与这一假设一致,注视时间增加,空间凝视分散随着语音掩蔽的增加而减少。在不同的视觉场景(自由观看、对象跟踪)和语言材料(简单句、自然故事)下,眼球运动减少。相比之下,瞳孔测量法在故事听力过程中对语音掩蔽不太敏感,这表明瞳孔测量法在自然语言-听力范式中对听力努力的评估可能不那么有效。我们的研究结果揭示了眼球运动和认知负荷之间的关键联系,表明大脑中支持眼球运动调节的区域的神经活动,如额眼野和上丘,在努力倾听时被调节。听力努力程度评估对于年龄相关性听力损失的早期诊断至关重要。瞳孔测量法是最常用的,但有几个缺点。目前的研究探索了一种通过眼球运动来评估听力努力的新方法。我们检验了一种假设,即当言语倾听变得费力时,眼球运动就会减少。我们证明,与这一假设一致,注视持续时间增加,注视分散随着言语掩蔽的增加而减少。在不同的视觉场景(自由观看、对象跟踪)和语言材料(句子、自然故事)下,眼球运动减少。我们的研究结果揭示了眼动和认知负荷之间的关键联系,表明当努力倾听时,大脑中支持眼动调节的区域的神经活动被调节。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Eye Movements Decrease during Effortful Speech Listening
Hearing impairment affects many older adults but is often diagnosed decades after speech comprehension in noisy situations has become effortful. Accurate assessment of listening effort may thus help diagnose hearing impairment earlier. However, pupillometry—the most used approach to assess listening effort—has limitations that hinder its use in practice. The current study explores a novel way to assess listening effort through eye movements. Building on cognitive and neurophysiological work, we examine the hypothesis that eye movements decrease when speech listening becomes challenging. In three experiments with human participants from both sexes, we demonstrate, consistent with this hypothesis, that fixation duration increases and spatial gaze dispersion decreases with increasing speech masking. Eye movements decreased during effortful speech listening for different visual scenes (free viewing, object tracking) and speech materials (simple sentences, naturalistic stories). In contrast, pupillometry was less sensitive to speech masking during story listening, suggesting pupillometric measures may not be as effective for the assessments of listening effort in naturalistic speech-listening paradigms. Our results reveal a critical link between eye movements and cognitive load, suggesting that neural activity in the brain regions that support the regulation of eye movements, such as frontal eye field and superior colliculus, are modulated when listening is effortful. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Assessment of listening effort is critical for early diagnosis of age-related hearing loss. Pupillometry is most used but has several disadvantages. The current study explores a novel way to assess listening effort through eye movements. We examine the hypothesis that eye movements decrease when speech listening becomes effortful. We demonstrate, consistent with this hypothesis, that fixation duration increases and gaze dispersion decreases with increasing speech masking. Eye movements decreased during effortful speech listening for different visual scenes (free viewing, object tracking) and speech materials (sentences, naturalistic stories). Our results reveal a critical link between eye movements and cognitive load, suggesting that neural activity in brain regions that support the regulation of eye movements are modulated when listening is effortful.
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