Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources

Traditionally, audiology research has focused primarily on hearing and related disorders. In recent years, however, growing interest and insight has developed into the interaction of hearing and cognition. This applies to a person’s listening and speech comprehension ability and the neural realizat...

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Main Authors: Ulrike eLemke, Sigrid eScherpiet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00998/full
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spelling doaj-4ed538c9e81d4c7487b20fad8bbc57f32020-11-24T23:59:01ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782015-07-01610.3389/fpsyg.2015.00998140374Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resourcesUlrike eLemke0Sigrid eScherpiet1Phonak AGPhonak AGTraditionally, audiology research has focused primarily on hearing and related disorders. In recent years, however, growing interest and insight has developed into the interaction of hearing and cognition. This applies to a person’s listening and speech comprehension ability and the neural realization thereof. The present perspective extends this view to oral communication, when two or more people interact in social context. Specifically, the impact of hearing impairment and cognitive changes with age is discussed.In focus are executive functions, a group of top-down processes that guide attention, thought and action according to goals and intentions. The strategic allocation of the limited cognitive processing capacity among concurrent tasks is often effortful, especially under adverse communication conditions and in old age. Working memory, a sub-function extensively discussed in cognitive hearing science, is here put into the context of other executive and cognitive functions required for oral communication and speech comprehension. Finally, taking an ecological view on hearing impairment, activity limitations and participation restrictions are discussed regarding their psycho-social impact and third-party disability.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00998/fullCommunicationexecutive functionscognitive agingspeech comprehensionhearing impairmentThird-party disability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ulrike eLemke
Sigrid eScherpiet
spellingShingle Ulrike eLemke
Sigrid eScherpiet
Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources
Frontiers in Psychology
Communication
executive functions
cognitive aging
speech comprehension
hearing impairment
Third-party disability
author_facet Ulrike eLemke
Sigrid eScherpiet
author_sort Ulrike eLemke
title Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources
title_short Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources
title_full Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources
title_fullStr Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources
title_full_unstemmed Oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources
title_sort oral communication in individuals with hearing impairment – considerations regarding attentional, cognitive and social resources
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Traditionally, audiology research has focused primarily on hearing and related disorders. In recent years, however, growing interest and insight has developed into the interaction of hearing and cognition. This applies to a person’s listening and speech comprehension ability and the neural realization thereof. The present perspective extends this view to oral communication, when two or more people interact in social context. Specifically, the impact of hearing impairment and cognitive changes with age is discussed.In focus are executive functions, a group of top-down processes that guide attention, thought and action according to goals and intentions. The strategic allocation of the limited cognitive processing capacity among concurrent tasks is often effortful, especially under adverse communication conditions and in old age. Working memory, a sub-function extensively discussed in cognitive hearing science, is here put into the context of other executive and cognitive functions required for oral communication and speech comprehension. Finally, taking an ecological view on hearing impairment, activity limitations and participation restrictions are discussed regarding their psycho-social impact and third-party disability.
topic Communication
executive functions
cognitive aging
speech comprehension
hearing impairment
Third-party disability
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00998/full
work_keys_str_mv AT ulrikeelemke oralcommunicationinindividualswithhearingimpairmentconsiderationsregardingattentionalcognitiveandsocialresources
AT sigridescherpiet oralcommunicationinindividualswithhearingimpairmentconsiderationsregardingattentionalcognitiveandsocialresources
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