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Featured researches published by Sushmit Mishra.


Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience | 2013

Seeing the talker's face supports executive processing of speech in steady state noise.

Sushmit Mishra; Thomas Lunner; Stefan Stenfelt; Jerker Rönnberg; Mary Rudner

Listening to speech in noise depletes cognitive resources, affecting speech processing. The present study investigated how remaining resources or cognitive spare capacity (CSC) can be deployed by young adults with normal hearing. We administered a test of CSC (CSCT; Mishra et al., 2013) along with a battery of established cognitive tests to 20 participants with normal hearing. In the CSCT, lists of two-digit numbers were presented with and without visual cues in quiet, as well as in steady-state and speech-like noise at a high intelligibility level. In low load conditions, two numbers were recalled according to instructions inducing executive processing (updating, inhibition) and in high load conditions the participants were additionally instructed to recall one extra number, which was the always the first item in the list. In line with previous findings, results showed that CSC was sensitive to memory load and executive function but generally not related to working memory capacity (WMC). Furthermore, CSCT scores in quiet were lowered by visual cues, probably due to distraction. In steady-state noise, the presence of visual cues improved CSCT scores, probably by enabling better encoding. Contrary to our expectation, CSCT performance was disrupted more in steady-state than speech-like noise, although only without visual cues, possibly because selective attention could be used to ignore the speech-like background and provide an enriched representation of target items in working memory similar to that obtained in quiet. This interpretation is supported by a consistent association between CSCT scores and updating skills.


Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2014

Cognitive spare capacity in older adults with hearing loss

Sushmit Mishra; Stefan Stenfelt; Thomas Lunner; Jerker Rönnberg; Mary Rudner

Individual differences in working memory capacity (WMC) are associated with speech recognition in adverse conditions, reflecting the need to maintain and process speech fragments until lexical access can be achieved. When working memory resources are engaged in unlocking the lexicon, there is less Cognitive Spare Capacity (CSC) available for higher level processing of speech. CSC is essential for interpreting the linguistic content of speech input and preparing an appropriate response, that is, engaging in conversation. Previously, we showed, using a Cognitive Spare Capacity Test (CSCT) that in young adults with normal hearing, CSC was not generally related to WMC and that when CSC decreased in noise it could be restored by visual cues. In the present study, we investigated CSC in 24 older adults with age-related hearing loss, by administering the CSCT and a battery of cognitive tests. We found generally reduced CSC in older adults with hearing loss compared to the younger group in our previous study, probably because they had poorer cognitive skills and deployed them differently. Importantly, CSC was not reduced in the older group when listening conditions were optimal. Visual cues improved CSC more for this group than for the younger group in our previous study. CSC of older adults with hearing loss was not generally related to WMC but it was consistently related to episodic long term memory, suggesting that the efficiency of this processing bottleneck is important for executive processing of speech in this group.


Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research | 2016

Seeing the Talker's Face Improves Free Recall of Speech for Young Adults With Normal Hearing but Not Older Adults With Hearing Loss

Mary Rudner; Sushmit Mishra; Stefan Stenfelt; Thomas Lunner; Jerker Rönnberg

PURPOSE Seeing the talkers face improves speech understanding in noise, possibly releasing resources for cognitive processing. We investigated whether it improves free recall of spoken two-digit numbers. METHOD Twenty younger adults with normal hearing and 24 older adults with hearing loss listened to and subsequently recalled lists of 13 two-digit numbers, with alternating male and female talkers. Lists were presented in quiet as well as in stationary and speech-like noise at a signal-to-noise ratio giving approximately 90% intelligibility. Amplification compensated for loss of audibility. RESULTS Seeing the talkers face improved free recall performance for the younger but not the older group. Poorer performance in background noise was contingent on individual differences in working memory capacity. The effect of seeing the talkers face did not differ in quiet and noise. CONCLUSIONS We have argued that the absence of an effect of seeing the talkers face for older adults with hearing loss may be due to modulation of audiovisual integration mechanisms caused by an interaction between task demands and participant characteristics. In particular, we suggest that executive task demands and interindividual executive skills may play a key role in determining the benefit of seeing the talkers face during a speech-based cognitive task.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2015

Theory-of-mind in individuals with Alström syndrome is related to executive functions, and verbal ability

Hans-Erik Frölander; Claes Möller; Mary Rudner; Sushmit Mishra; Jan D. Marshall; Heather Piacentini; Björn Lyxell

Objective: This study focuses on cognitive prerequisites for the development of theory-of-mind (ToM), the ability to impute mental states to self and others in young adults with Alström syndrome (AS). AS is a rare and quite recently described recessively inherited ciliopathic disorder which causes progressive sensorineural hearing loss and juvenile blindness, as well as many other organ dysfunctions. Two cognitive abilities were considered; Phonological working memory (WM) and executive functions (EF), both of importance in speech development. Methods: Ten individuals (18–37 years) diagnosed with AS, and 20 individuals with no known impairment matched for age, gender, and educational level participated. Sensory functions were measured. Information about motor functions and communicative skills was obtained from responses to a questionnaire. ToM was assessed using Happés strange stories, verbal ability by a vocabulary test, phonological WM by means of an auditory presented non-word serial recall task and EF by tests of updating and inhibition. Results: The AS group performed at a significantly lower level than the control group in both the ToM task and the EF tasks. A significant correlation was observed between recall of non-words and EF in the AS group. Updating, but not inhibition, correlated significantly with verbal ability, whereas both updating and inhibition were significantly related to the ability to initiate and sustain communication. Poorer performance in the ToM and EF tasks were related to language perseverance and motor mannerisms. Conclusion: The AS group displayed a delayed ToM as well as reduced phonological WM, EF, and verbal ability. A significant association between ToM and EF, suggests a compensatory role of EF. This association may reflect the importance of EF to perceive and process input from the social environment when the social interaction is challenged by dual sensory loss. We argue that limitations in EF capacity in individuals with AS, to some extent, may be related to early blindness and progressive hearing loss, but maybe also to gene specific abnormalities.


Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research | 2013

Visual Information Can Hinder Working Memory Processing of Speech

Sushmit Mishra; Thomas Lunner; Stefan Stenfelt; Jerker Rönnberg; Mary Rudner


FAS Graduate School, Centrum för Kommunikationsvetenskap, Linnaeus Centre HEAD and HEAD Graduate School workshop, From Speech to Understanding: Biological and cognitive mechanisms, November 10-12, 2010, Södertälje Sweden | 2010

Speech understanding and cognitive spare capacity

Sushmit Mishra; Mary Rudner; Thomas Lunner; Stefan Stenfelt; Jerker Rönnberg


Archive | 2013

Reading span performance in 339 Swedish 50-89 year old individuals with hearing impairment : Effects of test version and age, and relation to speech recognition in noise

Elisabet Classon; Hoi Ning Elaine Ng; Stig Arlinger; Lisa Kilman; Birgitta Larsby; Björn Lyxell; Thomas Lunner; Sushmit Mishra; Mary Rudner; Jerker Rönnberg


7th Speech in Noise Workshop, Copenhamn, Denmark, 8-9 January 2015 | 2015

Good working memory capacity facilitates long-term memory encoding of speech in stationary noise

Mary Rudner; Sushmit Mishra; S Stenfeldt; Thomas Lunner; Jerker Rönnberg


Archive | 2014

Updating ability reduces the negative effect of noise on memory of speech for persons with age-related hearing loss

Sushmit Mishra; Stefan Stenfelt; Thomas Lunner; Jerker Rönnberg; Mary Rudner


Archive | 2014

Adverse listening conditions disrupt executive processing of speech more for older adults with hearing impairment than for younger adults with normal hearing

Sushmit Mishra; Stefan Stenfelt; Thomas Lunner; Jerker Rönnberg; Mary Rudner

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