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Linguistic information compensates for age-related decline in attentional filtering

preprint

Abstract


As we age, understanding speech in social situations imposes an increasingly difficult challenge to the auditory system. However, the attentional mechanisms underlying age-related speech comprehension difficulties in multitalker situations remain unclear. We collected EEG signals while 63 normal hearing participants from 19 to 71 years performed a speech comprehension task involving a multitalker paradigm at individually adjusted target-to-distractor ratios. Combining trial-resolved multivariate temporal response function modeling with detailed behavioral comprehension responses, we provide a window into lower-level impairments and higher-level compensatory mechanisms across the adult life span. Neuro-behavioral correlations on a trial-by-trial level provide direct evidence for increased distractor representation underlying reduced behavioral performance in late adulthood. This points towards increased distractability as a potential mechanism underlying age-related speech comprehension deficits. Additionally, at the behavioral and neural levels, we show that older adults relied more on higher-level linguistic information. Finally, we show that an increased reliance on linguistic information may serve as a compensatory mechanism that supports comprehension performance across the adult life span. Summarizing, combining behavioral and neural data, we directly show that an increased reliance on linguistic processing can offset age-related impairments in attentional filtering.

preprint Vol. 0 2026


Authors

Barchet, A.V., Bruera, A., Rimmele, J.M., Obleser, Hartwigsen, J. &., & G.

  https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.01.08.698329

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