
News Release
One
Our Aging Ears
And Brains: Why Listening In Background Noise Gets Tougher As
We Age
ScienceDaily (Feb. 17,
2009) — Older adults often have trouble
understanding what someone is saying when surrounded by
background noise, such as at a restaurant or party, but
their ears may not be the only problem. Researchers at the
Medical University of South Carolina are studying how much
the brain plays a role as well.
Supported by the National Institute on Deafness and Other
Communication Disorders, one of the National Institutes of
Health, the scientists are presenting their findings at the
2009 Midwinter Meeting of the Association for Research in
Otolaryngology in Baltimore.
Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), the researchers
performed brain scans on 36 older and younger adults as they
tested their ability to identify certain words, some of which
had been filtered to make them difficult to understand. The
researchers analyzed the scans to functionally define speech-
and attention-related areas of the brain and then examined the
volume of gray matter in those regions for age-related
changes.
They found that, in general, older adults were significantly
worse at identifying words than younger adults in challenging
listening conditions. Even after eliminating variation due to
possible hearing loss, these differences in performance
corresponded closely to a loss of volume in a small portion of
the auditory cortex, a part of the brain that processes what
our ears hear. What's more, the relationship between the volume
of gray matter in this brain region and the ability to identify
words was present in both younger and older adults, suggesting
that aging may intensify developmental problems that a person
may have in understanding speech.
The findings could help us better understand presbycusis, a
type of hearing loss brought on by aging that also involves the
brain's ability to process what the ears hear.
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