Leeds: Beethoven composed some of his most famous works after he became profoundly deaf. More recently, musicians such as Ozzy Osbourne and Phil Collins have encountered problems with their hearing. Tinnitus affects many more, from Eric Clapton and Neil Young to will.i.am. Now a collaborative
project between the University of Leeds and Sheffield Teaching Hospitals
NHS Foundation Trust is bringing together music psychologist Dr Alinka Greasley
and Dr Harriet Crook, to investigate how music listening experiences are affected by
deafness, hearing impairments and the use of hearing aids.
The project, Hearing Aids for Music,
will look at how people use hearing aids in musical situations, from
listening to music at home to going to a symphony or rock concert.
Dr
Greasley, from the University’s School of Music, pointed out that you
don’t need to have lived a rock ’n’ roll lifestyle to have a hearing
impairment.
“As
a population we’re tending to live longer, and many people’s hearing
naturally declines as we get older,” she said. “Action on Hearing Loss
reports that there are 10 million people with hearing impairments in the
UK – two million of them wear hearing aids – and these numbers are
rising.
“Music
is an important part of people’s lives and can have powerful physical,
social, and emotional effects on individuals, including those with all
levels of hearing impairment – even the profoundly deaf. The purpose of
hearing aids is to amplify speech, and evidence suggests that many
hearing aid users experience problems when listening to music, such as
acoustic feedback, distortion and reduced tone quality.
“Exploring
these issues systematically, through a combination of in-depth
interviewing and a large-scale national survey, will allow us to
understand these problems and identify areas for improving the
perception of music using hearing aid technology.”
As
well as providing advice to hearing aid users, results will be used to
help audiologists talk about music listening issues with patients in
their clinics. The research may also benefit manufacturers of hearing
aids by providing a basis for improved digital signal processing,
helping users of the technology to access music.
Dr
Crook, an expert in the neuroscience of music perception based at the
Royal Hallamshire Hospital, said: “This is the first time hearing test
data has been used alongside social psychological data to create a
systematic exploration into how hearing aids affect music listening
behaviours.
“Improved
access to music using hearing aids will benefit people of all ages,
facilitating music education for deaf children and young people, music
listening and performance in adulthood, and continued musical engagement
into old age.”
Despite
the large numbers of those affected, very little is known about the
music listening experiences and behaviour of people with hearing
impairments because previous studies have assumed a typical level of
hearing in participants.
“People
tell us that modern digital hearing aids have proved a revelation
because they reveal hitherto ‘lost’ sounds such as a humming fridge or
boiling kettle, yet listening to music is still problematic” said Dr
Greasley.
Pianist Danny Lane, himself profoundly deaf, is Artistic Director of West Yorkshire charity Music and the Deaf, founded in 1988 to help deaf people access music and performing arts.
He
said: “This research is very much needed. Music and the Deaf often
receives emails from musicians or parents of musical children who are
frustrated with their hearing aids.
“Music
forms a very important part of their lives – anything that might help
improve their enjoyment of it, whether as listeners or performers, is to
be welcomed.”
Dr Greasley is conducting interviews with hearing aid users and will also lead a large-scale national online survey.
Dr
Robert Fulford, a Post-doctoral Research Fellow at the University, is
also working on the three year project, which has been awarded funding
worth £247,295 from the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
Drs
Greasley, Crook and Fulford are joined by an advisory panel consisting
of experts in auditory processing, digital signal processing, hearing
aid fitting, hearing therapy and deaf education.
Their
findings will benefit hearing aid users and people with all levels of
deafness, both in the UK and internationally, through open access
content on the project website and forum.
