Understanding speech in noisy environments is a challenging task that requires sensory and cognitive functions, including memory and auditory attention. Bilinguals and monolinguals have different scores of these abilities. This study aims to investigate the relationship between these cognitive skills and compare Turkish-Persian bilinguals with Persian monolinguals regarding speech-in-noise scores. 45 Turkish-Persian bilinguals and 45 Persian monolinguals, aged 18-25 (mean age 21.67), with normal hearing, participated in a speech in noise, auditory working memory, and auditory attention tests. The bilingual group performed significantly worse than the monolingual group in the quick speech-in-noise and n-back auditory working memory tests ( < 0.05). However, their score on the auditory attention test was better ( < 0.05). Bilinguals showed a significant correlation between auditory working memory, auditory attention, and speech perception in noise. A linear regression validated the proposed model, predicting speech perception scores in noise based on auditory attention and auditory working memory in bilinguals (r2: 0.20, P: 0.008). Research suggests that various cognitive factors impact an individual's ability to perceive speech in noisy environments. Specifically, auditory attention and working memory have different levels of influence on this skill for bilingual individuals.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12070-024-05194-6 | DOI Listing |
Indian J Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg
January 2025
Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Substance Abuse and Dependence Research Center, University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Understanding speech in noisy environments is a challenging task that requires sensory and cognitive functions, including memory and auditory attention. Bilinguals and monolinguals have different scores of these abilities. This study aims to investigate the relationship between these cognitive skills and compare Turkish-Persian bilinguals with Persian monolinguals regarding speech-in-noise scores.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: This study aimed to evaluate the effects of frequency-specific music stimulation on the awareness and brain connectivity in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC).
Methods: A total of 25 DOC patients were exposed to auditory stimulation through music at varying frequencies (low: <0.5 Hz, middle: 0.
Front Digit Health
February 2025
Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
Mental health disorders and cognitive decline are pressing global concerns, increasing the demand for non-pharmacological interventions targeting emotional dysregulation, memory deficits, and neural dysfunction. This review systematically examines three promising methodologies-music therapy, brainwave entrainment (binaural beats, isochronic tones, multisensory stimulation), and their integration into a unified therapeutic paradigm. Emerging evidence indicates that music therapy modulates affect, reduces stress, and enhances cognition by engaging limbic, prefrontal, and reward circuits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Sci
May 2025
Center for Childhood Deafness, Language, and Learning, Boys Town National Research Hospital, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
Recent studies indicate children who are deaf and hard of hearing who use cochlear implants or hearing aids know fewer spoken words than their peers with typical hearing, and often those vocabularies differ in composition. To date, however, the interaction of a child's auditory profile with the lexical characteristics of words he or she knows has been minimally explored. The purpose of the present study is to evaluate how audiological history, phonological memory, and overall vocabulary knowledge interact with growth in types of spoken words known by children who are deaf and hard of hearing compared to children with typical hearing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCognition
March 2025
Centro de Investigação e Intervenção Social (CIS-IUL), Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL), Lisboa, Portugal. Electronic address:
Music training is widely claimed to enhance nonmusical abilities, yet causal evidence remains inconclusive. Moreover, research tends to focus on cognitive over socioemotional outcomes. In two studies, we investigated whether music training improves emotion recognition in voices and faces among school-aged children.
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