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Clinical Trials/NCT03999606
NCT03999606
Completed
Not Applicable

Short-Term Music Training and Auditory Processing in Older Adults

University of Southern California1 site in 1 country61 target enrollmentOctober 1, 2020
ConditionsMusic Education

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Music Education
Sponsor
University of Southern California
Enrollment
61
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Enhanced speech in noise perception
Status
Completed
Last Updated
3 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Most adults experience some degree of hearing loss by age 60. Hearing aids can improve some aspects of peripheral hearing but the loss of the ability to clearly perceive speech in noisy environments remains to be a significant deficit and often reduces life quality in older adults. Long-term music training has been shown to enhance auditory processing and specifically benefit speech-in-noise perception. It is not clear however whether short-term participation in a musically engaged activity can benefit such abilities in older adults. The proposed study aims to investigate whether short-term participation in a weekly community choir can improve speech in noise perception and its neural substrates as measured by sensory auditory evoked potentials (ERPs) to speech stimuli in older adults with mild to moderate subjective hearing loss. Sixty participants, ages 50-65, will be recruited to partake in this study and will be randomly assigned to two groups: participants in the experimental group will join a weekly remote choir on an on-line platform (Zoom), for ten weeks, directed by a professionally trained conductor from USC Department of Choral Music. The group practice will be accompanied by individual singing lessons (online or CDs) for home practice. Participants in the control group will be provided with weekly remote mindfulness lessons also on an on-line platform. All participants will be assessed remotely pre and post intervention, with behavioral measures of speech in noise perception and probes assessing emotional well-being and life satisfaction. Changes in auditory measures and their neural correlates and overall quality of life will be compared between the groups. The findings from this study can provide preliminary data to support a larger study on the impact of music engagement in improving the lives of older adults.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
October 1, 2020
End Date
March 30, 2021
Last Updated
3 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Single Group
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Assal Habibi

Assistant Research Professor of Psychology

University of Southern California

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Native English speaker with experience of subjective hearing loss;
  • Normal IQs (standard score of \>85) as measured by the two-subtest Abbreviated Wechsler's Adult Scale of Intelligence.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Use of prescribed hearing aids;
  • Sever hearing loss (thresholds of 60 and 95 dB)
  • Current diagnosis of neurological or psychiatric disorders
  • Impaired cognitive function (all participants will be screened with the Montreal Cognitive Assessment Battery)

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Enhanced speech in noise perception

Time Frame: 15 weeks

EEG data will be collected using the speech syllable /da/, spoken in isolation by an American female. The stimulus will be presented in four conditions, in quiet and in presence of an 8-talker babble noise at three SNRs (10, 5 and 0 dB), presented in a random order for each participant, with an inter-stimulus interval of 1000 ms.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Psychological Well-Being(15 weeks)

Study Sites (1)

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