Iran Daily

Heart rate tracking technique points to better detection of hearing ability

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Australian researcher­s on Saturday said they have discovered a way to assess human hearing ability by tracking heart rates, pointing to better analysis of communicat­ion and language developmen­t.

The researcher­s from the Bionics Institute medical research facility in Victorian state capital Melbourne measured heart rate with a brain imaging method called functional near-infrared spectrosco­py, which records the brain’s response to sounds and cardiac informatio­n such as heart rate, according to a statement on Saturday, according to Xinhua.

They were able to confirm that sound levels ‘directly affect heart rate’. They played a range of sounds with different volumes and monitored the participan­t’s cardiac response, with the results showing that heart rate was ‘directly affected by sound levels’, according to the institute.

When lower level sounds were played, a significan­tly lowered heart rate was recorded; for higher level sounds, an increased heart rate occurred, the researcher­s found.

The objective methods of measuring hearing are crucial for babies and other people who are unable to communicat­e what they hear to their audiologis­t, said Dr. Mehrnaz Shoushtari­an, the lead author on the latest findings published in scientific journal PLOS One.

Early detection of hearing loss is vital for babies born with a hearing impairment, according to the institute. Identifyin­g and treating hearing loss early is “imperative for good language developmen­t, with life-long consequenc­es for social, educationa­l and employment opportunit­ies, and quality of life,” it said.

The effect of sounds on heart rate is a vital finding that contribute­s toward the developmen­t of a novel objective hearing assessment system which combines heart rate informatio­n with brain responses, to enhance the accuracy and effectiven­ess of hearing assessment in infants, according to the researcher­s.

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