2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.heares.2021.108334
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Social observation increases the cardiovascular response of hearing-impaired listeners during a speech reception task

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Cited by 12 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…91 Alternatively, it is also seen that the presence of another individual during listening tasks causes an increase in listening effort. 93 94 The researchers state that increased motivation due to social evaluative stress to perform could be one of the reasons for this increased effort. Hence, emotions, motivation, and affect all have an impact on listening effort and may impact an individual's engagement and participation in communication.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…91 Alternatively, it is also seen that the presence of another individual during listening tasks causes an increase in listening effort. 93 94 The researchers state that increased motivation due to social evaluative stress to perform could be one of the reasons for this increased effort. Hence, emotions, motivation, and affect all have an impact on listening effort and may impact an individual's engagement and participation in communication.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A review by Cooke et al also describes overt modifications to speech directed at listeners with HL aimed at promoting audibility, increasing coherence, enhancing linguistic information or decreasing cognitive effort associated with the listening task [ 98 ]. The present trend to include interlocutors or observers to enhance the ecological validity of hearing research suggests there is a growing awareness by cognitive hearing scientists of communication partners’ influence on adults with HL self-appraisal and consequently their self-management of real-world listening (for examples, see [ 99 101 ]). Understanding the communication mechanisms in interpersonal relationships will be key if measurement of communication ability is to be both valid and reliable.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first step may thus be a clear and commonly accepted definition of the concept of listening effort. Without a clear definition of the concept, we will struggle to differentiate it from other phenomena 22 -for instance, to decide whether a listening situation is more effortful or more arousing 11,16 -to find (psychophysiological) measures that appropriately match our concept, 22,23 and to build a refined theory of listening effort. 24 Psychophysiological measures can be viewed as proxies to self-report measures of subjectively perceived listening effort-a rating or other type of assessment of the individual's perception of how effortful listening is-which in common language may be viewed as the most meaningful definition of listening effort.…”
Section: Selection Of Appropriate Physiological Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One option is to analyze all physiological measures in a two-step procedure where a first multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) is used as gatekeeper for follow-up univariate tests. 67 For instance, Plain and colleagues 11 analyzed seven different physiological listening effort measures by first conducting a MANOVA that included all measures and then using univariate tests for those measures that were significant. If such a two-stage procedure is used with appropriately adapted critical F - and t -values for the follow-up tests, it can successfully control the maximum type-I error rate.…”
Section: Statistical Analysis Of Multiple Physiological Measuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
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