:: Volume 5, Issue 3 (Autumn 2020) ::
joge 2020, 5(3): 36-44 Back to browse issues page
Comparison of the executive functions of elderly people with cochlear implantation and the elderly with hearing aids
SAKINEH Soltani Kouhbanani * , Somaye Zarenezhad
Department of Educational Sciences, Faculty of Education and Psychology, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad,Mashhad, Iran
Abstract:   (2542 Views)
Background : Hearing impairment affects all aspects of a person's life, especially auditory perception, while the use of cochlear implantation or hearing aids has a positive effect on auditory function. The aim of this study was to compare the improvement of executive dysfunction in elderly people who are performing cochlear implantation with people who use hearing aids.
Methods: The present study is of causal-comparative type which was performed in 1397 as an available sample on 105 elderly people over 65 years of age with hearing loss referred to Mashhad audiometry centers. The elderly participants in the study were divided into two groups, with the first and second groups being the elderly candidates for cochlear implantation and hearing aids, respectively. To collect the data, the Delis-Kaplan Executive Task Package Test (Ghavami et al., 2016) was used. Data were compared using multivariate variance and independent t. The data were analyzed by SPSS-v.20 computer software and analyzed.
Results: The results showed that the scores of the elderly with hearing impairment with cochlear implantation in the executive functions of non-verbal working memory (P <0.001, F = 0.01), verbal cognitive flexibility (P <0.001, 0.98) = F). And nonverbal (P <0.001, F = 0.89), problem solving (P = 0.004, f = 22.32) and response inhibition (P <0.001, F = 4.81) as such Significance varies with hearing aids compared to the scores of the elderly
Conclusion: The results showed that there is a difference between executive functions in the elderly with hearing loss in the two groups of cochlear implantation and hearing aids.
Keywords: Executive functions, cochlear implantation, Hearing aids
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Type of Study: Original research | Subject: Eldely mental and psychological issues
Received: 2020/04/16 | Accepted: 2020/06/9 | Published: 2020/10/1


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Volume 5, Issue 3 (Autumn 2020) Back to browse issues page