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Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions

Background noise elicits listening effort. What else is tinnitus if not an endogenous background noise? From such reasoning, we hypothesized the occurrence of increased listening effort in tinnitus patients during listening tasks. Such a hypothesis was tested by investigating some indices of listeni...

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Autores principales: Cartocci, Giulia, Inguscio, Bianca Maria Serena, Giliberto, Giovanna, Vozzi, Alessia, Giorgi, Andrea, Greco, Antonio, Babiloni, Fabio, Attanasio, Giuseppe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10377270/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37509014
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13071084
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author Cartocci, Giulia
Inguscio, Bianca Maria Serena
Giliberto, Giovanna
Vozzi, Alessia
Giorgi, Andrea
Greco, Antonio
Babiloni, Fabio
Attanasio, Giuseppe
author_facet Cartocci, Giulia
Inguscio, Bianca Maria Serena
Giliberto, Giovanna
Vozzi, Alessia
Giorgi, Andrea
Greco, Antonio
Babiloni, Fabio
Attanasio, Giuseppe
author_sort Cartocci, Giulia
collection PubMed
description Background noise elicits listening effort. What else is tinnitus if not an endogenous background noise? From such reasoning, we hypothesized the occurrence of increased listening effort in tinnitus patients during listening tasks. Such a hypothesis was tested by investigating some indices of listening effort through electroencephalographic and skin conductance, particularly parietal and frontal alpha and electrodermal activity (EDA). Furthermore, tinnitus distress questionnaires (THI and TQ12-I) were employed. Parietal alpha values were positively correlated to TQ12-I scores, and both were negatively correlated to EDA; Pre-stimulus frontal alpha correlated with the THI score in our pilot study; finally, results showed a general trend of increased frontal alpha activity in the tinnitus group in comparison to the control group. Parietal alpha during the listening to stimuli, positively correlated to the TQ12-I, appears to reflect a higher listening effort in tinnitus patients and the perception of tinnitus symptoms. The negative correlation between both listening effort (parietal alpha) and tinnitus symptoms perception (TQ12-I scores) with EDA levels could be explained by a less responsive sympathetic nervous system to prepare the body to expend increased energy during the “fight or flight” response, due to pauperization of energy from tinnitus perception.
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spelling pubmed-103772702023-07-29 Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions Cartocci, Giulia Inguscio, Bianca Maria Serena Giliberto, Giovanna Vozzi, Alessia Giorgi, Andrea Greco, Antonio Babiloni, Fabio Attanasio, Giuseppe Brain Sci Article Background noise elicits listening effort. What else is tinnitus if not an endogenous background noise? From such reasoning, we hypothesized the occurrence of increased listening effort in tinnitus patients during listening tasks. Such a hypothesis was tested by investigating some indices of listening effort through electroencephalographic and skin conductance, particularly parietal and frontal alpha and electrodermal activity (EDA). Furthermore, tinnitus distress questionnaires (THI and TQ12-I) were employed. Parietal alpha values were positively correlated to TQ12-I scores, and both were negatively correlated to EDA; Pre-stimulus frontal alpha correlated with the THI score in our pilot study; finally, results showed a general trend of increased frontal alpha activity in the tinnitus group in comparison to the control group. Parietal alpha during the listening to stimuli, positively correlated to the TQ12-I, appears to reflect a higher listening effort in tinnitus patients and the perception of tinnitus symptoms. The negative correlation between both listening effort (parietal alpha) and tinnitus symptoms perception (TQ12-I scores) with EDA levels could be explained by a less responsive sympathetic nervous system to prepare the body to expend increased energy during the “fight or flight” response, due to pauperization of energy from tinnitus perception. MDPI 2023-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10377270/ /pubmed/37509014 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13071084 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Cartocci, Giulia
Inguscio, Bianca Maria Serena
Giliberto, Giovanna
Vozzi, Alessia
Giorgi, Andrea
Greco, Antonio
Babiloni, Fabio
Attanasio, Giuseppe
Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions
title Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions
title_full Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions
title_fullStr Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions
title_short Listening Effort in Tinnitus: A Pilot Study Employing a Light EEG Headset and Skin Conductance Assessment during the Listening to a Continuous Speech Stimulus under Different SNR Conditions
title_sort listening effort in tinnitus: a pilot study employing a light eeg headset and skin conductance assessment during the listening to a continuous speech stimulus under different snr conditions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10377270/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37509014
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13071084
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