posted on 2021-08-09, 12:36authored bySilvia Turri, Mehdi Rizvi, Giuseppe Rabini, Alessandra Melonio, Rosella Gennari, Francesco Pavani
<p>The
understanding of linguistic messages can be made extremely complex by the
simultaneous presence of interfering sounds, especially when they are also linguistic
in nature. In two experiments, we tested if visual cues directing attention to spatial
or temporal components of speech in noise can improve its identification. The hearing-in-noise
task required identification of a five-digit sequence (target) embedded in a
stream of time-reversed speech. Using a custom-built device located in front of
the participant, we delivered visual cues to orient attention to the location of
target sounds and/or their temporal window. In Exp. 1 (<i>n</i> = 14), we
validated this visual-to-auditory cueing method in normal-hearing listeners,
tested under typical binaural listening conditions. In Exp. 2 (<i>n</i> = 13),
we assessed the efficacy of the same visual cues in normal-hearing listeners wearing
a monaural ear plug, to study the effects of simulated monaural and conductive
hearing loss on visual-to-auditory attention orienting. While Exp. 1 revealed a
benefit of both spatial and temporal visual cues for hearing in noise, Exp. 2
showed that only the temporal visual cues remained effective during monaural
listening. These findings indicate that when the acoustic experience is altered,
visual-to-auditory attention orienting is more robust for temporal compared to
spatial attributes of the auditory stimuli. These findings have implications
for the relation between spatial and temporal attributes of sound objects, and when
planning devices to orient audiovisual attention for subjects suffering from
hearing loss.</p>