Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment

In order to explore verbal-nonverbal integration, we investigated the influence of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior during spoken language conversation between children with mild-to-moderate hearing impairment (HI) and normal-hearing (NH) peers. Ten HI-NH and ten NH-NH dyads perform...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Olof eSandgren, Richard eAndersson, Joost evan de Weijer, Kristina eHansson, Birgitta eSahlén
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00856/full
id doaj-3e358946c5b54168a0d3ece4b43eb232
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3e358946c5b54168a0d3ece4b43eb2322020-11-24T22:33:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782013-11-01410.3389/fpsyg.2013.0085660324Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairmentOlof eSandgren0Richard eAndersson1Joost evan de Weijer2Kristina eHansson3Birgitta eSahlén4Lund UniversityLund UniversityLund UniversityLund UniversityLund UniversityIn order to explore verbal-nonverbal integration, we investigated the influence of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior during spoken language conversation between children with mild-to-moderate hearing impairment (HI) and normal-hearing (NH) peers. Ten HI-NH and ten NH-NH dyads performed a referential communication task requiring description of faces. During task performance, eye movements and speech were tracked. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to model associations between performance on cognitive and linguistic tasks and the probability of gaze to the conversational partner’s face. Analyses compare the listeners in each dyad (HI: n = 10, mean age = 12;6 years, SD = 2;0, mean better ear pure-tone average 33.0 dB HL, SD = 7.8; NH: n = 10, mean age = 13;7 years, SD = 1;11). Group differences in gaze behavior – with HI gazing more to the conversational partner than NH – remained significant despite adjustment for ability on receptive grammar, expressive vocabulary, and complex working memory. Adjustment for phonological short term memory, as measured by nonword repetition, removed group differences, revealing an interaction between group membership and nonword repetition ability. Stratified analysis showed a twofold increase of the probability of gaze-to-partner for HI with low phonological short term memory capacity, and a decreased probability for HI with high capacity, as compared to NH peers. The results revealed differences in gaze behavior attributable to performance on a phonological short term memory task. Participants with hearing impairment and low phonological short term memory capacity showed a doubled probability of gaze to the conversational partner, indicative of a visual bias. The results stress the need to look beyond the hearing impairment in diagnostics and intervention. Acknowledgment of the finding requires clinical assessment of children with hearing impairment to be supported by tasks tapping phonological processing.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00856/fulleye trackingnonword repetitionreferential communicationCox regressiongaze behaviorchild hearing impairment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olof eSandgren
Richard eAndersson
Joost evan de Weijer
Kristina eHansson
Birgitta eSahlén
spellingShingle Olof eSandgren
Richard eAndersson
Joost evan de Weijer
Kristina eHansson
Birgitta eSahlén
Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment
Frontiers in Psychology
eye tracking
nonword repetition
referential communication
Cox regression
gaze behavior
child hearing impairment
author_facet Olof eSandgren
Richard eAndersson
Joost evan de Weijer
Kristina eHansson
Birgitta eSahlén
author_sort Olof eSandgren
title Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment
title_short Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment
title_full Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment
title_fullStr Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment
title_full_unstemmed Impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment
title_sort impact of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior in children with hearing impairment
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2013-11-01
description In order to explore verbal-nonverbal integration, we investigated the influence of cognitive and linguistic ability on gaze behavior during spoken language conversation between children with mild-to-moderate hearing impairment (HI) and normal-hearing (NH) peers. Ten HI-NH and ten NH-NH dyads performed a referential communication task requiring description of faces. During task performance, eye movements and speech were tracked. Cox proportional hazards regression was used to model associations between performance on cognitive and linguistic tasks and the probability of gaze to the conversational partner’s face. Analyses compare the listeners in each dyad (HI: n = 10, mean age = 12;6 years, SD = 2;0, mean better ear pure-tone average 33.0 dB HL, SD = 7.8; NH: n = 10, mean age = 13;7 years, SD = 1;11). Group differences in gaze behavior – with HI gazing more to the conversational partner than NH – remained significant despite adjustment for ability on receptive grammar, expressive vocabulary, and complex working memory. Adjustment for phonological short term memory, as measured by nonword repetition, removed group differences, revealing an interaction between group membership and nonword repetition ability. Stratified analysis showed a twofold increase of the probability of gaze-to-partner for HI with low phonological short term memory capacity, and a decreased probability for HI with high capacity, as compared to NH peers. The results revealed differences in gaze behavior attributable to performance on a phonological short term memory task. Participants with hearing impairment and low phonological short term memory capacity showed a doubled probability of gaze to the conversational partner, indicative of a visual bias. The results stress the need to look beyond the hearing impairment in diagnostics and intervention. Acknowledgment of the finding requires clinical assessment of children with hearing impairment to be supported by tasks tapping phonological processing.
topic eye tracking
nonword repetition
referential communication
Cox regression
gaze behavior
child hearing impairment
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00856/full
work_keys_str_mv AT olofesandgren impactofcognitiveandlinguisticabilityongazebehaviorinchildrenwithhearingimpairment
AT richardeandersson impactofcognitiveandlinguisticabilityongazebehaviorinchildrenwithhearingimpairment
AT joostevandeweijer impactofcognitiveandlinguisticabilityongazebehaviorinchildrenwithhearingimpairment
AT kristinaehansson impactofcognitiveandlinguisticabilityongazebehaviorinchildrenwithhearingimpairment
AT birgittaesahlen impactofcognitiveandlinguisticabilityongazebehaviorinchildrenwithhearingimpairment
_version_ 1725729743853060096