Reversal of age-related neural timing delays with training
Samira Andersona, Travis White-Schwocha, Alexandra Parbery-Clarka, and Nina Krausa,b,c,d,1
Neural slowing is commonly noted in older adults, with consequences
for sensory, motor, and cognitive domains. One of the deleterious
effects of neural slowing is impairment of temporal resolution; older
adults, therefore, have reduced ability to process the rapid events that
characterize speech, especially in noisy environments. Although hearing
aids provide increased audibility, they cannot compensate for deficits
in auditory temporal processing. Auditory training may provide a
strategy to address these deficits. To that end, we evaluated the
effects of auditory-based cognitive training on the temporal precision
of subcortical processing of speech in noise. After training, older
adults exhibited faster neural timing and experienced gains in memory,
speed of processing, and speech-in-noise perception, whereas a matched
control group showed no changes. Training was also associated with
decreased variability of brainstem response peaks, suggesting a decrease
in temporal jitter in response to a speech signal. These results
demonstrate that auditory-based cognitive training can partially restore
age-related deficits in temporal processing in the brain; this
plasticity in turn promotes better cognitive and perceptual skills.