Genç Yetişkinlerde Gürültü Türlerinin Bilişsel Becerilerin Üzerindeki Etkisinin İncelenmesi
Özet
ELSHARKAWY, A. Examining the Effect of Noise Types on Cognitive Skills in
Young Adults, Hacettepe University Graduate School of Health Sciences
Master's Thesis in Audiology Program, Ankara, 2021. Noise is usually mentioned
as any undesirable sound. It has been determined that noise affects cognitive skills,
although there are conflicting reports about the influence of noise on cognitive
performance in the literature. This study researched the effect of noise types on
cognitive skills in 47 young adults aged 18-39 years who have normal hearing and
normal general intelligence scores. The participants were first evaluated as
audiological. The participants with normal hearing were performed the Raven
Standard Progressive Matrices Test. Then, when the participants were brought in the
silent cabinet, The Serial Digit Learning Test, Stroop Test, and Verbal Fluency Test,
respectively, which were fundamental for the study, were performed in silence, white
noise, and speech noise conditions. After the tests, the participants were asked to fill
the Speech, Spatial Perception, and Qualities of Hearing Scale (SSQ). A statistically
significant difference was observed between silence and meaningless speech noise
conditions in the Serial Digit Learning Test, in which short-term memory skills are
evaluated (p<0.001). No significant difference was found in Stroop performance in all
three listening conditions in the Stroop Test, in which executive function performance
are evaluated (p<0.001). It was determined that there were statistically significant
differences in all conditions between each other in the Verbal Fluency Test in which
the ability to recall from long-term memory and verbal fluency was evaluated
(p<0.05). It was observed that the Stroop stimulus card correction in the speech noise
condition decreased when speech perception and the overall score increased in the
SSQ scale (p<0.001).
Keywords: White noise, speech noise, young adult, executive functions, verbal
fluency, short term memory.