6 results on '"Anouk Sangen"'
Search Results
2. Instant improvement in monaural spatial hearing abilities through cognitive feedback
- Author
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Tine Arras, Hillary Snapp, Anouk Sangen, Chantal Snels, Iris Kuntz, Tinne Theunen, Kiana Kheirkhah, Andrzej Zarowski, Thomas Wesarg, Astrid van Wieringen, and Martijn J. H. Agterberg
- Subjects
Cognition ,Hearing ,General Neuroscience ,Biophysics ,Auditory Perception ,Humans ,Sound Localization ,Sensory disorders Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 12] ,Feedback - Abstract
Several studies report that sound localization performance of acute and chronic monauralized normal-hearing listeners can improve through training. Typically, training sessions are administered daily for several days or weeks. While this intensive training is effective, it may also be that monaural localization abilities improve instantly after providing explicit top-down information about the direction dependent change in timbre and level. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether cognitive feedback (i.e., top-down information) could instantly improve sound localization in naive acutely monauralized listeners. Forty-three normal-hearing listeners (experimental group), divided over five different centers, were tested. Two control groups, consisting of, respectively, nine and eleven normal-hearing listeners, were tested in one center. Broadband sounds (0.5-20 kHz) were presented from visible loudspeakers, positioned in azimuth (- 90° to 90°). Participants in the experimental group received explicit information about the noticeable difference in timbre and the poor localization in the monauralized listening condition, resulting in an instant improvement in sound localization abilities. With subsequent roving of stimulus level (20 dB), sound localization performance deteriorated immediately. The reported improvement is related to the context of the localization test. The results provide important implications for studies investigating sound localization in a clinical setting, especially during closed-set testing, and indicate the importance of top-down information. ispartof: Experimental Brain Research vol:240 issue:5 pages:1357-1369 ispartof: location:Germany status: published
- Published
- 2021
3. Correlation and agreement between Language ENvironment Analysis (lena™) and manual transcription for Dutch natural language recordings
- Author
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Tobias Busch, Anouk Sangen, Filiep Vanpoucke, and Astrid Van Wieringen
- Subjects
Electronic media ,QUANTITATIVE LINGUISTIC FEEDBACK ,Environment analysis ,Speech recognition ,Social Sciences ,CHILDREN ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,COMMUNICATION ,050105 experimental psychology ,Mean difference ,Agreement ,Psychology, Mathematical ,Method comparison ,Correlation ,030507 speech-language pathology & audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Measurement error ,Bias ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Transcription (linguistics) ,Statistics ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Child vocalization count ,SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,AUTISM ,Adult word count ,General Psychology ,Psychology, Experimental ,05 social sciences ,Limits of agreement ,Automatic speech recognition ,Agreement analysis ,SPEECH ,Reliability ,SIBLINGS ,VOCABULARY ,Conversational turn count ,Psychology (miscellaneous) ,Dutch ,0305 other medical science ,Human transcription ,Natural language - Abstract
The Language ENvironment Analysis system (LENA™) automatically analyzes the natural sound environments of children. Among other things, it estimates the amounts of adult words (AWC), child vocalizations (CV), conversational turns (CT), and electronic media (TV) that a child is exposed to. To assess LENA's reliability, we compared it to manual transcription. Specifically, we calculated the correlation and agreement between the LENA estimates and manual counts for 48 five-min audio samples. These samples were selected from eight day-long recordings of six Dutch-speaking children (ages 2-5). The correlations were strong for AWC, r = . 87, and CV, r = . 77, and comparatively low for CT, r = . 52, and TV, r = . 50. However, the agreement analysis revealed a constant bias in AWC counts, and proportional biases for CV and CT (i.e., the bias varied with the values for CV and CT). Agreement for detecting electronic media was poor. Moreover, the limits of agreement were wide for all four metrics. That is, the differences between LENA and the manual transcriptions for individual audio samples varied widely around the mean difference. This variation could indicate that LENA was affected by differences between the samples that did not equally affect the human transcribers. The disagreements and biases cast doubt on the comparability of LENA measurements across families and time, which is crucial for using LENA in research. Our sample is too small to conclude within which limits LENA's measurements are comparable, but it seems advisable to be cautious of factors that could systematically bias LENA's performance and thereby create confounds. ispartof: BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS vol:50 issue:5 pages:1921-1932 ispartof: location:United States status: published
- Published
- 2017
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4. Single-sided deafness affects language and auditory development - a case-control study
- Author
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Jan Wouters, Liesbeth Royackers, Anouk Sangen, A. Van Wieringen, and Christian Desloovere
- Subjects
Male ,Auditory perception ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vocabulary ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Deafness ,Audiology ,Hearing Loss, Unilateral ,Language Development ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Memory ,Intervention (counseling) ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Active listening ,Child ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,media_common ,Working memory ,business.industry ,Syntax ,Language development ,Cochlear Implants ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Auditory Perception ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Objectives To examine auditory, linguistic and cognitive outcomes of children with single sided deafness (SSD). An increasing body of research suggests that children with SSD lag behind with respect to their normal hearing (NH) peers. In the present study we tap into certain developmental skills. Design Case–control study. Participants 21 children with SSD between 5 and 15 years of age participated. Per child with SSD two NH control children were matched on age and gender. Outcome measures Morphology, syntax and vocabulary were examined and performance was assessed in depth by focusing on sub skills and type of errors made. Furthermore, tests of short term and working memory were conducted and aspects of hearing disability were assessed by means of the speech spatial and qualities of hearing questionnaire (SSQ). Main results The children with SSD lagged behind in their scores on the three language tests and showed some differences to the NH group concerning type of errors and difficulty of the several subskills. Furthermore, scores on the SSQ indicated that in daily life, the children with SSD experience problems in spatial hearing and in understanding speech in noisy situations, and that the effort they have to put into listening and in understanding speech is considerably greater than in NH children. Conclusions The present study showed differences between children with SSD and NH children on several language skills and on auditory behavior. Possibly, early intervention could prevent such language difficulties and minimize problems with spatial hearing and speech understanding. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Correlation and agreement between Language ENvironment Analysis (LENA™) and manual transcription for Dutch natural language recordings
- Author
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Tobias, Busch, Anouk, Sangen, Filiep, Vanpoucke, and Astrid, van Wieringen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Child, Preschool ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Female ,Environment ,Speech Recognition Software ,Language ,Netherlands - Abstract
The Language ENvironment Analysis system (LENA™) automatically analyzes the natural sound environments of children. Among other things, it estimates the amounts of adult words (AWC), child vocalizations (CV), conversational turns (CT), and electronic media (TV) that a child is exposed to. To assess LENA's reliability, we compared it to manual transcription. Specifically, we calculated the correlation and agreement between the LENA estimates and manual counts for 48 five-min audio samples. These samples were selected from eight day-long recordings of six Dutch-speaking children (ages 2-5). The correlations were strong for AWC, r = . 87, and CV, r = . 77, and comparatively low for CT, r = . 52, and TV, r = . 50. However, the agreement analysis revealed a constant bias in AWC counts, and proportional biases for CV and CT (i.e., the bias varied with the values for CV and CT). Agreement for detecting electronic media was poor. Moreover, the limits of agreement were wide for all four metrics. That is, the differences between LENA and the manual transcriptions for individual audio samples varied widely around the mean difference. This variation could indicate that LENA was affected by differences between the samples that did not equally affect the human transcribers. The disagreements and biases cast doubt on the comparability of LENA measurements across families and time, which is crucial for using LENA in research. Our sample is too small to conclude within which limits LENA's measurements are comparable, but it seems advisable to be cautious of factors that could systematically bias LENA's performance and thereby create confounds.
- Published
- 2017
6. Unilateral congenital hearing loss in children: Challenges and potentials
- Author
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An Boudewyns, Astrid Van Wieringen, Jan Wouters, Christian Desloovere, and Anouk Sangen
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Audiology ,Congenital hearing loss ,Hearing Loss, Unilateral ,Language Development ,03 medical and health sciences ,Executive Function ,0302 clinical medicine ,Belgium ,Cochlear implant ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Sound Localization ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Window of opportunity ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Cognition ,medicine.disease ,Mental Status and Dementia Tests ,Sensory Systems ,3. Good health ,Cochlear Implants ,Memory, Short-Term ,Persons With Hearing Impairments ,Child, Preschool ,Etiology ,Speech Perception ,Female ,Human medicine ,Unilateral hearing loss ,business ,Neurocognitive ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The estimated incidence of sensorineural hearing impairment (>40 dB HL) at birth is 1.86 per 1000 newborns in developed countries and 30-40% of these are unilateral. Profound sensorineural unilateral hearing impairment or single sided deafness (SSD) can be treated with a cochlear implant. However, this treatment is costly and invasive and unnecessary in the eyes of many. Very young children with SSD often do not exhibit language and cognitive delays and it is hard to imagine that neurocognitive skills will present difficulties with one good ear. In the current paper we review the most recent evidence on the consequences of unilateral hearing impairment for auditory and neurocognitive factors. While data of both adults and children are discussed, we focus on developmental factors, congenital deafness and a window of opportunity for intervention. We discuss which etiologies qualify for a cochlear implant and present our multi-center prospective study on cochlear implants in infants with one deaf ear. The large, state-of-the art body of research allows for evidence-based decisions regarding management of unilateral hearing loss in children. ispartof: Hearing Research vol:7501 pages:29-29 ispartof: location:Netherlands status: published
- Published
- 2017
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