Our abilities to maintain our brain function can be directly linked to our senses.  If we stop listening to sounds, we can limit our abilities to process speech.  Gradual hearing loss slowly reduces the amount of sound input to our brain.  Most people first start to lose high pitched sounds, which makes speech understanding difficult, despite they hear someone talking at a good loudness level.  Years of listening without those high pitched sounds can impair the brain’s ability to process speech, even when it is loud enough to hear.  Hearing aids can help correct that deficit.

Studies have shown that as people age, their abilities to process speech slows, regardless of hearing loss.  (Gosselin and Gagne, 2011).  http://www.audiology.org/news/Pages/20110715.aspx

However, another recent study recently published revealed that if we train our brain to listen to fast speech and speech in background noise, just as a marathon runner trains their leg muscles, we have a better chance of maintaining its processing functions.  (Gordon-Salant and Friedman, 2011)  http://www.audiology.org/news/Pages/20110523.aspx  This study was conducted with older blind adults and older sighted adults.  The findings revealed that the group with vision loss had significantly better speech understanding abilities than the group with normal vision.  This is believed to be the case because the group with vision loss tended to listen to books on tape, whereas the non-vision-impaired group did not partake regularly in this auditory training activity.

Moral of today’s blog:  If you don’t use it, you lose it.


Dawn Heiman, AuD
Dawn Heiman, AuD

Dr. Dawn Heiman is an audiologist in private practice in Illinois, President-Elect of the Academy of Doctors of Audiology, the founder of EntreAudiology, and Adjunct Faculty at Rush University. For questions about hearing loss and hearing aids, contact Dr. Heiman at info@helpingyourhearing.com and get your questions answered before you make a costly mistake.