The CogniAid trial. The impact of two hearing aid signal processing strategies on cognition

BackgroundUntreated hearing loss is a risk factor for age-related cognitive decline and hearing aids have been shown to slow cognitive decline in a population at risk for dementia. This double-blind multiple site randomized trial tested the hypothesis that for older adults with below-average cogniti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in audiology and otology 2024-01, Vol.2
Hauptverfasser: Searchfield, Grant Donald, McAuliffe, Megan J., Fok, Christine, Kyaw, Tin Aung, Williams, Eric, Burton-Harris, Lisa, Coad, Gavin, Grady, Jonny, Smith, Alice, Vajsakovic, Dunja
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BackgroundUntreated hearing loss is a risk factor for age-related cognitive decline and hearing aids have been shown to slow cognitive decline in a population at risk for dementia. This double-blind multiple site randomized trial tested the hypothesis that for older adults with below-average cognition, a “Simple” hearing aid fitting strategy (based on linear amplification with output limiting compression signal processing) would improve hearing and cognition more than a “Standard” approach (adaptive compression-based processing).MethodsTwo hundred and fifty-six adults aged over 65 were screened for cognitive function using the NIH toolbox cognitive battery. Participants with below median age-adjusted fluid composite cognitive scores (
ISSN:2813-6055
2813-6055
DOI:10.3389/fauot.2024.1285496