A comparison of higher order auditory processes in younger and older adults |
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Authors: | Murphy Dana R Schneider Bruce A Speranza Filippo Moraglia Giampaolo |
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Affiliation: | Centre for Research on Biological Communication Systems, University of Toronto at Mississauga, Mississauga, ON, Canada. danam@nipissingu.ca |
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Abstract: | The authors conducted 3 experiments investigating the effects of aging on higher order auditory processes. They compared younger and older adults with respect to (a) their auditory channel capacity, (b) the extent of their top-down control over auditory gain, and (c) their ability to focus attention on a narrow band of frequencies. To ensure that subclinical cochlear processing deficits in older adults (e.g., higher thresholds, poorer discrimination of frequency and intensity differences) did not limit performance, the authors used only stimuli that were perfectly discriminable by all participants. No age differences were found in any of these experiments, suggesting that some higher order auditory processes (e.g., top-down control over auditory gain, auditory attention) are preserved in normal aging, despite numerous age-related declines in peripheral auditory functionality. |
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