Introduction
Executive functions (EFs) are a set of skills that facilitate planning, organizing, and structuring daily life activities and long-term life goals (Blair, 2017; Doebel, 2020). EF are principally mediated by the frontal lobes, specifically by the prefrontal cortex, with its right dorsolateral area involved with monitoring behavior and its left dorsolateral area related to verbal processing. Both dorsolateral areas, together with the superior medial frontal lobe, are required for shifting, whereas the inferior medial frontal area contributes to response inhibition (Blair, 2017; Jurado & Rosselli, 2007). EF performance is also associated with a series of neural circuits connecting the frontal lobes with subcortical structures (Goldstein, Naglieri, Princiotta, & Otero, 2014; Royall et al., 2002).
Although EF are not directly associated with the symbolic processing of information, they are related to its control and organization, as well as the coordination and programming of movement and behaviors directed towards a purposeful activity (Corbett, Constantine, Hendren, Rocke, & Ozonoff, 2009; Luria, 1977; Ustárroz, Molina, Lario, García, & Lago, 2012). EF also include selective attention, working memory, and cognitive flexibility, which are required for concept formation and perceptual activity (Anderson, 2002; Gilbert & Burgess, 2008; Ropovik, 2014). Furthermore, the structuring of logical syntax within coherent discourse and the modulation of behavior and affection in different scenarios are also considered to be EF-dependent abilities (Gilbert & Burgess, 2008).
The domains of EF have been described by different authors; some have proposed that there are three categories, while others have suggested that there are more than five (Ardila & Ostrosky-Solís, 2008; Diamond, 2013). However, most studies agree that EF include the following domains: inhibition, planning, working memory, cognitive flexibility, attention, problem solving, and reasoning, which are capacities that develop from early on in life (Flores-Lázaro, Castillo-Preciado, & Jiménez-Miramonte, 2014).
Multiple tools have been used to measure the different EF skills including the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) 2nd edition, BRIEF-Preschool, National Institutes of Health (NIH) Toolbox Cognitive Assessment Battery, Stroop test, Tower of London test, Go/No-Go task, Tower of Hanoi, Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, and subtests from the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) (Chan, Shum, Toulopoulou, & Chen, 2008; Delgado-Mejía & Etchepareborda, 2013; Flores-Lázaro, Ostrosky-Solís, & Lozano-Gutiérrez, 2008; Soprano, 2003). The BRIEF is a standardized questionnaire designed for parents, teachers, and caregivers to evaluate a child’s real-life performance in eight domains of executive functions including inhibition, shifting, emotional control, working memory, plan/organize, organization of materials, and monitor. Contrastingly, other laboratory-based tools, such as the Stroop test and Tower of Hanoi, are carried out in a controlled environment to reduce biased results (Goldstein & Naglieri, 2014).
On the other hand, the WISC IV and V, provides information about executive functions by examining specific tasks that require working memory and processing speed. WISC V evaluates five primary index scores including Verbal Comprehension Index (VCI), Visual Spatial Index (VSI), Working Memory Index (WMI), Fluid Reasoning Index (FRI), and Processing Speed Index (PSI), of which WMI, FRI, and PSI provide important information regarding performance in executive function. Additionally, it measures complementary index scales which indirectly measure working memory such as Naming Speed Index, Symbol Translation Index, and Storage and Retrieval Index. Compared to WISC IV, the fifth edition includes a revision of instructions for children’s better comprehension of evaluating tasks and simplifies scoring criteria. Furthermore, both tests require trained evaluators with experience in child assessment and in the application of the test (Lace et al., 2020; Pearson Assessment, 2018).
Certain physical, emotional, and social factors are required for the adequate acquisition of EF (Diamond & Lee, 2011). However, some conditions, such as hearing loss, may influence the optimal development of EF. Hearing loss is a treatable condition, which may interfere with normal neurodevelopment, especially in the acquisition of communication skills (Korver et al., 2017). Hearing loss can be classified according to the localization of damage (conductive, sensorineural, or mixed hearing loss), the degree of hearing loss (mild, moderate, severe, and profound), and its etiology (ASHA, 2016; Korver et al., 2017). Stevens et al. (2013) have reported that the prevalence of hearing loss in children between five to 14 years old can range from 1.0 to 2.2% and is more prevalent in boys than in girls. Furthermore, it has been found that as the population grows, the prevalence of hearing loss increases; in newborns, the prevalence is 1.33 per 1,000 live births, and 3.5 per 1,000 in adolescent population (Morton & Nance, 2006; Watkin & Baldwin, 2012).
Children with hearing loss may have language developmental delay of both comprehensive and expressive skills. Altered hearing afferences, either in the receptor or the transmission route, deprive the subject of adequate development of skills such as perception and auditory discrimination. The magnitude of the commitment will be related to the age of diagnosis and the beginning of rehabilitation, degree of hearing loss, and the use of hearing amplifiers or cochlear implant (Acosta Rodríguez, Ramírez Santana, & Hernández Expósito, 2017). Language allows nomination, categorization, and generalization of the surrounding environment, favoring the development of abstraction capacity. As experience is enriched, and new information is provided, these abilities mature and constitute the basic pillars for cognition. Furthermore, language remains a key aspect in the capacity of self-monitor and self-regulation since the early developmental stages (Petersen, Bates, & Staples, 2014). As a result, the delay in language development affects performance in both verbal and non-verbal assignments, which compromises performance in tasks related to executive functions (Perszyk & Waxman, 2018).
Depending on the etiology and degree of hearing loss, the cognitive skills of these individuals vary. Nevertheless, the use of hearing aids or cochlear implants, combined with adequate language therapy will support the communication skills allowing them to perform tasks similar to those with normal hearing (Paluch et al., 2019; Yoshinaga-Itano, Sedey, Wiggin, & Mason, 2018). However, speech is not the only way to communicate, for example, native sign language subjects have been found to perform at the same level as their hearing peers in the Auslan working memory span task (Wang & Napier, 2013). Regarding the reading process, which involves functions such as attention, inhibition, and cognitive flexibility (Roldán, 2016), children with hearing loss, including cochlear implant users, have been found to perform lower in emergent literacy than their normal-hearing peers (Werfel, 2017). Furthermore, concept formation involves several abilities, including language, higher-order cognitive functions, and EF (Seel, 2012; Yoshida & Smith, 2003). Castellanos et al. (2015) reported that, despite the use of a cochlear implant, children with hearing loss perform significantly lower in concept formation and abstraction tasks than their normal-hearing peers.
Despite expanding research in EF, there are few studies that have explored EF performance in children with hearing loss. The aim of this systematic review of the literature was to describe the qualitative characteristics of EF performance in children and adolescents with hearing loss, with or without hearing aids, cochlear implants, and/or native sign language, and to propose methods that provide information about EF in this population taking into account their specific language characteristics.
Method
Protocol registration was submitted to PROSPERO; however, it was rejected due to the high demand of submissions regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. We conducted literature searches of different databases, including PubMed, Scopus, and ScienceDirect. The terms included in the search were as follows: “sensorineural hearing loss, deafness, hearing loss impairment, inhibition, attention, and executive functions.” The search syntax used for PubMed was as follows: ((((sensorineural hearing loss) OR deafness) OR hearing loss impairment) AND inhibition) AND executive functions.
The first search carried out by three authors JCS, SRG, MVC, without any date restriction, revealed few unrelated articles published before the year 2000; therefore, the cut-off point was taken from that year on. The last search date was April 2020. The inclusion criteria were as follows: articles with cross-sectional, case-control, and case series design publications after 2000, subjects were under 18 years old, and no language filter was used. By limiting the age group to children and adolescents under 18 years old, it is possible to better discriminate congenital hearing loss from other multifactorial etiologies that induce hearing loss in adult population. A total of 228 articles were identified. After manually removing duplicates by the first three authors, 128 references remained. Of these, 105 articles were filtered and eliminated by title and abstract, particularly those unrelated to the topic or that did not comply with the established inclusion criteria. All authors participated at this stage. In all author’s periodic meetings, reasons for eliminating articles were clearly stated and discussed in detail. The following articles were excluded: review articles, case reports, publications with subjects older than 18 years, and papers unrelated to the topic. Data from the remaining 23 studies were analyzed using full-text and quality assessment that was supported by the Critical Appraisal Tools provided by Joanna Briggs Institute (Joanna Briggs Institute, 2017). Each quality assessment tool is specifically designed for each type of study (cohort, case control, etc.), which were applied to each article accordingly. The quality result, as shown in Table 1 , reports the relationship between the number of items achieved by the article over the total number of items evaluated. The final percentage must be 70% or more for the article to be considered in the review (Joanna Briggs Institute, 2017).
Author | Tool |
Quality results
(%) |
|
---|---|---|---|
1 | Al-Salim, S. et al. | Cohort | 9/11 (82%) |
2 | Beer, J. et al. | Cross sectional | 6/8 (75%) |
3 | Beer, J. et al. | Case and controls | 8/9 (89%) |
4 | Daza, M. T. et al. | Cohort | 6/8 (75%) |
5 | Ead, B. et al. | Case and control | 7/9 (78%) |
6 | Figueras, B. et al. | Case and control | 7/10 (70%) |
7 | Hall, et al. | Case and control | 10/10 (100%) |
8 | Holt, D. et al. | Cross sectional | 6/8 (75%) |
9 | Kirby, B. et al. | Cross sectional | 6/8 (75%) |
10 | Kronenberger, W. G. et al. | Cohort | 8/10 (80%) |
11 | Nittrouer, S. et al. | Case and control | 8/10 (80%) |
12 | Nunes, T. et al. | Case and control | 7/9 (78%) |
13 | Pagliaro & Ansell | Cross sectional | 6/8 (75%) |
14 | Surowiecki, V. et al. | Case and control | 9/10 (90%) |
15 | Xuan, B. et al. | Case and control | 7/9 (78%) |
Note: Not all criteria were applicable to each article. The overall result (%) excluded the criteria not applicable for each study.
Of those 23 studies, 10 articles were further excluded because they were unrelated to the objectives of the search, the age of participants was outside the range, and the variables measured were not related to EF. Finally, 15 articles were selected for qualitative synthesis. Appendix was performed independently for each article as shown in Supplementary Data. Due to the lack of a standardized assessment tool for children and adolescents with hearing loss, there was insufficient data for quantitative analysis, therefore, a qualitative analysis was preferred. This systematic review was conducted using the parameters established by the PRISMA Statement (Figure 1; Moher, Liberati, Tetzlaff, & Altman, 2009).
Results
Among the 15 studies analyzed, there were seven case-control and six cross-sectional studies. The age range was from one to 18 years, with more frequent cases including those between the age ranges of six to 18 years. Some studies did not report the sex of the cases; those that reported sex found no significant difference between male and female participants. However, there was great variability in the number of subjects from seven to 71. Table 2 describes the main variables of each study.
Study | Year |
Number of subjects
with hearing loss |
Degree of hearing loss | Cognitive domains compromised |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ead et al. | 2013 | 7/14 | Profound | - Complex verbal working
memory - Verbal/Phonological processing |
Daza et al. | 2014 | 30/30 | Severe-to-profound,
Mild-to-mod- erate, cochlear implants and con- ventional hearing aids |
- No significant difference |
Al-Salim et al. | 2020 | 65/100 | Mild, cochlear implant | - Phonological processing - Vocabulary - Working memory - Executive functions |
Kirby et al. | 2019 | 24/24 | Mild, hearing aid | - No significant differences |
Beer et al. | 2014 | 24/45 | Profound, cochlear implant | - Executive functions - Attention and inhibition |
Surowiecki et al. | 2002 | 48/48 | Profound, Severe, Moder- ate-to-severe, cochlear implants |
- No significant differences |
Xuan et al. | 2018 | 36/72 | Profound | - Decision-making |
Nittrouer et al. | 2012 | 35/52 | Severe-to-profound,
Moderate, cochlear implants |
- Emergent literacy - Oral language skills |
Figueras et al. | 2008 | 47/69 | Profound, Moderate, Severe,
co- chlear implants |
- Intelligence |
Holt et al. | 2013 | 59/59 | Cochlear implants | - Inhibitory control - Language and vocabulary development - Shifting attention - Working memory |
Nunes et al. | 2009 | 55/133 | Moderate,
Severe-to-profound, cochlear implants |
- Multiplicative reasoning |
Pagliaro & Ansell | 2012 | 59/59 | Mild, moderate, severe, pro- found, cochlear implants |
- Problem-solving |
Hall et al. | 2018 | 71/116 | Cochlear implant, sign language | - Inhibition - Working memory |
Beer et al. | 2011 | 45/45 | Cochlear implant | - Inhibition - Working memory |
Kronenberger et al. | 2020 | 41/81 | Cochlear implant | -
Language - Inhibition - Working memory |
Although all articles included objective measures for executive function, it was not possible to synthetize and compare them using the same criteria due to the variety of assessment tools used. Each study evaluated different skills: some used specific tests for children with hearing loss, while others applied tests designed for the general population. The assessment tools are outlined in Table 3.
Assessment tools | |
---|---|
Attention | Inhibition |
- Child Neuropsychological Maturity
Questionnaire computeri- zed version |
- Go/No-Go task |
- The Intradimensional/Extradimensional Set Shift Task | - Flanker Inhibitory Control task |
- The Tower of London test | |
- Attention subtest of the NIH toolbox | |
- Attention Sustained subtest of the
Leiter International Per- formance Scale |
|
Intelligence | Executive functions |
- Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence | - Short-term memory task |
- Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children IV | - From NEPSY battery: Tower, Visual
Attention, Design Fluency, and Knock and Tap |
- The Picture Similarities subtest of the Differential Ability Scales | - Day-Night and One-Two tasks |
- Raven’s Progressive Matrices | - From de D-KEFS battery: Card Sorting test |
- The Hiskey-Nebraska Test of Learning Aptitude | - Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function |
- Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function-Preschool | |
- Dimensional Change Card Sort | |
- NIH Toolbox Cognitive Assessment Battery | |
- Beery Developmental Test of Visual Motor Integration | |
- Decision-Making tasks: Iowa Gambling Task and Game of Dice Task | |
Memory | Language, vocabulary, speech, and phonological abilities |
Working memory | Language |
- Letter Span Tasks | - The Preschool Language Scale 4th edition |
- Counting Span Tasks | - Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals preschool test |
- Counting Recall subtest of the
Automated Working Memory Assessment |
- The Auditory Comprehension subtest
of the Preschool Language Scales 4th edition |
- Nonword repetition task | - Nonword repetition task |
- The Spatial Working Memory task | - Spectral-temporally Modulated Ripple test |
Visuospatial/spatial memory | - Aided Speech Intelligibility Index |
- Visuospatial Memory Span Tasks | - The Expressive One-Word Picture Vocabulary test |
- Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children | - The British Picture Vocabulary Scale |
- Memory for Designs subtest of the NEPSY-II | - The Test for Reception of Grammar |
- The Pattern and Spatial Recognition test | - Bamford-Kowal-Bench Sentence List |
- The Delayed Matching to Sample test | - Consonant-Nucleus-Consonant word lists |
- The Paired Associates test | Vocabulary |
- Corsi block task | - Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test Revised |
Short-term visual memory | - Carolina Picture Vocabulary Test for Deaf and Hearing Impaired Children |
- Memory of Faces task | - Vocabulary subtest of the Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence II |
Speech | |
- The Northwestern University
Children’s Perception of Speech closed consonant perception test |
|
Phonological abilities | |
- Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing | |
- Rhyme Judgment Requiring Picture Selection | |
- Psycholinguistic Assessments of Language Processing in Aphasia | |
- Initial Consonant Same-Different task | |
- The Final Consonant Choice task |
As a standardized measure to classify hearing loss, most studies recorded the degrees of hearing loss based on pure-tone average (PTA). Only some studies used the classification established by the American Speech–Language–Hearing Association (ASHA, 2016; Clark, 1981; Table 4).
Degree of hearing loss | Hearing loss range (dB HL) |
---|---|
Normal | −10 to 15 |
Slight | 16 to 25 |
Mild | 26 to 40 |
Moderate | 41 to 55 |
Moderately severe | 56 to 70 |
Severe | 71 to 90 |
Profound | 91+ |
Note: (ASHA, 2016).
Some studies failed to report the methodology used to group subjects, so it remained unclear whether such grouping was based on hearing level or threshold ranges to establish the degree of hearing loss. Moreover, the studies that included children with cochlear implants reported variable durations of device use (from .5 to 16 years), as well as varying ages of implantation (from approximately one year to 3.5 years).
In terms of children with normal hearing, some studies recruited age- and sex-matched controls (Surowiecki et al., 2002), while others included subjects’ siblings to control sociodemographic factors that may have an effect on children’s overall performance (Ead, Hale, DeAlwis, & Lieu, 2013). The allocation of children with both sensorineural and conductive hearing loss to the same group in one study (Al-Salim, Moeller, & McGregor, 2020) contrasts with the rest of the studies, which only focused on sensorineural hearing loss.
There was no uniformity in the results obtained by different authors. While some reported success in different sets of skills, others reported a significantly lower performance on the same tasks (Figueras, Edwards, & Langdon, 2008).
Some studies found no significant difference in performance in EFs between children with normal hearing and those with hearing loss, independent of the degree of hearing loss and the type of hearing aid or cochlear implant (Beer et al., 2014; Daza, Phillips-Silver, Ruiz-Cuadra, & López-López, 2014; Figueras et al., 2008; Hall, Eigsti, Bortfeld, & Lillo-Martin, 2018; Kirby, Spratford, Klein, & McCreery, 2019; Nittrouer, Caldwell, Lowenstein, Tarr, & Holloman, 2012; Surowiecki et al., 2002). According to this finding, the following EFs of children with hearing loss was not different to those with normal hearing: inhibition, working memory, attention, visual attention, visual memory, cognitive flexibility, and planning/organizing (Beer, Kronenberger, & Pisoni, 2011; Beer et al., 2014; Figueras et al., 2008; Hall et al., 2018; Kirby et al., 2019; Kronenberger, Xu, & Pisoni, 2020; Surowiecki et al., 2002). Furthermore, children with hearing loss had similar comprehensive and expressive vocabulary and phonological skills as those with normal hearing (Daza et al., 2014; Nittrouer et al., 2012). Nonetheless, another study reported that children fluent in verbal or sign communication performed better than those who did not, independent of their hearing loss (Hall et al., 2018). Similarly, children with good family support, including maternal sensitivity, use of oral language, organization and control at home, supportiveness and cohesion among family members, family size, and education level, tended to have better emotional and inhibitory control (Holt, Beer, Kronenberger, & Pisoni, 2013). Conversely, several studies reported that children with hearing loss performed significantly lower than those with normal hearing in EFs, such as working memory, inhibition, cognitive flexibility, and attention (Beer et al., 2014; Figueras et al., 2008; Hall et al., 2018; Kirby et al., 2019; Kronenberger et al., 2020; Surowiecki et al., 2002).
Discussion and conclusion
The role of language in overall performance
of children and adolescents with
hearing loss
The results of this systematic review indicate that children with deafness have a lower performance in hearing skills, from phonological discrimination to verbal reasoning, which are acquired later, regardless of whether the child had a cochlear implant or some other hearing aid. If stimuli are presented in a multiple-choice format or if recognition is limited to hearing, deaf children presented greater difficulties; however, if these were accompanied by visual clues, performance was improved (Al-Salim et al., 2020). Despite the use of cochlear implants or hearing aids, children with hearing loss do not have the same linguistic development as their hearing peers (Ambrose, Fey, & Eisenberg, 2012; Colin, Leybaert, Ecalle, & Magnan, 2013; Nittrouer et al., 2012). For example, James, Rajput, Brinton, and Goswami, (2008) found that children who had received cochlear implantation at an early age had a lower performance in phonological awareness compared with the normal-hearing controls. However, Svirsky, Robbins, Kirk, Pisoni, and Miyamoto (2000) reported that cochlear implantation at an early age can improve language development when compared with children with conventional hearing aids. Furthermore, Figueras et al. (2008) reported that children with cochlear implants have a better response to auditory stimuli as well as improved speech and language skills compared with children with other hearing aids. Such differences in language development may contribute to the variability of the results of the studies included, not only between children with hearing loss and children with normal hearing, but also among children with different types of hearing aids.
The performance of deaf children in vocabulary tasks varied between the studies included. Grammar difficulties in children with hearing loss were also reported (Al-Salim et al., 2020; Daza et al., 2014; Figueras et al., 2008; Nittrouer et al., 2012). Variations in grammar skills in children with hearing loss can be attributed to greater delays in their syntax acquisition and difficulties in hearing essential morphemes compared with children with normal hearing, which represent an additional barrier in the learning of new words (Moeller & Tomblin, 2015). Such struggles with the acoustic-phonetic properties of spoken language mean that children with hearing loss have a limited access to linguistic input and, as a consequence, a reduction in language experience (Moeller & Tomblin, 2015).
Reading skills and mathematical problem solving are associated with language development, and children with hearing loss had less efficient reading and mathematical problem-solving skills; however, children with hearing loss were able to increase their reading ability via alternative routes, such as visual attention and visual memory (Daza et al., 2014; Nunes et al., 2009). Children with normal hearing, as well as those with hearing loss, have been shown to use similar strategies for mathematical problem solving (Pagliaro & Ansell, 2012).
Types of hearing loss, hearing aids and communication skills
Although some studies employed the same parameters to evaluate hearing loss, such as PTA, there was a great variability between the studies in the degree of hearing loss; indeed, some authors selected their own thresholds and did not consider the parameters established by the ASHA (2016) or the World Health Organization (2020). Hearing aids and cochlear implants also vary in their time of use, and there is no clear information regarding their functional aspects, which challenges the validity of this comparison. Nittrouer et al. (2012) identified moderately strong correlations between the age of implantation and both phonemic awareness and auditory comprehension. In addition, Niparko et al. (2010) found better language comprehension and expression in children with earlier cochlear implants. Therefore, the longer use of cochlear implants improves phonological awareness (Nittrouer et al., 2012). Additionally, Nicholas and Geers (2007) found higher performance levels in children who received a more advanced implant technology. This means that technological differences in cochlear implants used could contribute to variations in performance.
While some studies were limited to children with unilateral hearing loss only (Ead et al., 2013), others compared children with unilateral hearing loss, bilateral hearing loss, and those with cochlear implants within the same study (Al-Salim et al., 2020). Considering that children with unilateral hearing loss may have a normal hearing level in the unaffected ear, their performance is not comparable with that of children with bilateral hearing loss (Lieu, 2004). Differences between children with unilateral hearing loss and children with bilateral hearing loss or normal hearing are largely due to the change from binaural to monoaural sound inputs to the brain. This has been shown to affect the development of cognitive functions and the ability to localize sound (Lewis, Smith, Spalding, & Valente, 2018; Lieu, 2004; Schmithorst, Plante, & Holland, 2014).
It is noteworthy to mention that, in one study, children who used Spanish sign language were compared with spoken Spanish rehabilitated subjects, and their performance was similar to those reported by other authors (Daza et al., 2014). Other work included children that used native American sign language and showed no significant difference in EFs compared to children with cochlear implants, children with hearing loss, and normal hearing peers (Hall et al., 2018).
Children with hearing loss have developmental differences regarding communication skills and cognitive abilities depending on the etiology, degree of hearing loss, family support, early diagnosis, and type and time of rehabilitation, which make it difficult to compare them under the same criteria. However, defining a global developmental trend in executive function in this population outlines their strengths and weaknesses which can be used to better direct their rehabilitation (Korver et al., 2017; Niparko et al., 2010; The Joint Committee of Infant Hearing, 2019).
Executive function performance in hearing loss
The performance of children with hearing impairment on the tasks related to EF, such as working memory, inhibition, cognitive flexibility, and attention, tended to be inconsistent among the studies reviewed. Such inconsistencies could be attributed to the use of different methods of evaluation. (Hall, Eigsti, Bortfeld, & Lillo-Martin, 2017), which highlights the need for a standardized tool for this population.
Out of the fifteen articles analyzed, only three reported no significant differences between the population groups studied. One of them studied children with cochlear implants compared to children with hearing aids; therefore, there was no normal hearing control group to compare them with (Surowiecki et al., 2002). Another one focused on specific aspects such as comparing good and bad readers regarding phonological skills (Daza et al., 2014), while the other used tests like the Spectral-temporally modulated ripple test which is specific for the population with cochlear implants with no comparable results to normal hearing population (Kirby et al., 2019).
Kronenberger, Pisoni, Henning, and Colson (2013) mentioned that despite the prolonged use of cochlear implants, the performance in EFs, particularly working memory, verbal fluency, inhibition, and attention, was lower in deaf individuals compared to their normal hearing peers.
These findings are consistent with the period of deafness that occurs prior to the diagnosis and intervention which represent a critical moment in neurodevelopment. This means that children with hearing loss are deprived of important auditory information that influences language development (Kronenberger et al., 2013).
The studies that used the BRIEF and BRIEF-P showed that parents reported a lower performance in tasks related to attention, inhibitory control, and working memory; some authors also included shifting attention in this list (Beer et al., 2014; Hall et al., 2018; Kronenberger et al., 2020). These findings have been supported by other reports that children with cochlear implants presented with difficulties in working memory and inhibitory control scales, as well as in the behavioral regulation index, according to parent reports (Beer et al., 2011). Kronenberger et al. (2013) established that verbal skills are directly involved with EFs; therefore, children with hearing loss who present a delay in language acquisition are expected to have suboptimal development in processes used for directing and controlling thoughts and behavior, thereby explaining the parent-reported deficit in areas such as inhibitory control. It is worth noting that the articles included in this review only report the parents’ perception of children’s performance. Other studies have included both parent and teacher reports and have highlighted the differences between them regarding specific EFs. Sabat, Arango, Tassé, and Tenorio (2020) attribute this disagreement to the different skills that children are expected to acquire in the corresponding environment. As a result, children who are exposed to a constant learning of new concepts, as occurs in a classroom environment, require EF such as inhibition and cognitive flexibility to adapt effectively. In contrast, at home children are expected to develop more predictable adaptive skills involving other EF domains such as working memory (Sabat et al., 2020). Therefore, EF deficits can be perceived as more or less severe depending on the demand in the different settings.
Contributions and future implications
Given the range of causes and degree of hearing loss, time of diagnosis, and beginning of rehabilitation therapy, performance in EF is expected to vary. Furthermore, hearing loss in developed countries is mainly attributed to genetic causes, whereas in developing countries are more common hearing loss secondary to infectious and other preventable causes (Korver et al., 2017).
As seen in Table 3, a wide range of assessment tools were used. This indicates that there are no uniform criteria for the evaluation of EF in children with hearing loss. Despite the variability of assessment tools employed in the evaluation of this population, the selected studies indicated that children with hearing impairment had a lower performance in working memory, inhibition, cognitive flexibility, and attention measures (Botting et al., 2017). These findings highlight the importance of developing or adapting an objective, reliable, and standardized evaluating tool to assess EF according to this population’s specific characteristics.
Despite the variability of tests and types of studies evaluated, there are evident weaknesses in EF performance in this population. This represents a therapeutic and rehabilitation target for them to access better long term educational and professional opportunities. Furthermore, a multidisciplinary team is required to improve the understanding of parents about their children’s condition, such as the John Tracy Center. They provide structured support programs according to age-group, family structure, and specific individual characteristics (JTC, 2021).