# Listening effort and stress in tinnitus: a multidimensional approach

**Authors:** Giovanna Giliberto, Maria Itati Palacio, Giulia Cartocci, Emiliano Fernandez-Villalba, Dario Rossi, Nieves Minguez, Maria Botia, Jose Domingo Cubillana, Jose Joaquin Ceron, Fabio Babiloni, Maria Trinidad Herrero

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2025.1591622 · 2025-07-07

## TL;DR

This study explores how chronic tinnitus affects listening effort and stress, highlighting differences between males and females.

## Contribution

The study introduces a multidimensional approach to assess tinnitus impact, combining auditory perception, text comprehension, and physiological stress responses.

## Key findings

- Tinnitus participants performed worse in quiet and noisy listening conditions compared to controls.
- Male controls scored higher than males with tinnitus, and EEG data showed higher enjoyment in males.
- Salivary amylase increased post-task, and heart rate varied with noise levels, indicating stress responses.

## Abstract

This study investigated the impact of chronic tinnitus on auditory perception, text comprehension, and physiological stress responses, with a focus on sex-related differences. The main objectives were to assess the influence of sex and stress on tinnitus severity, examine neurophysiological indicators of listening effort, and evaluate the effects of background noise on perceived difficulty and listening pleasantness.

Forty-seven participants (24 with tinnitus, 23 controls) performed a listening task involving audiobook excerpts presented at different signal-to-noise ratios. Subjective ratings, comprehension scores, and physiological data were collected, including salivary alpha-amylase, electrodermal activity, heart rate, and EEG-based measures of listening pleasantness.

Control participants outperformed tinnitus participants during the initial quiet condition (p = 0.020), with male controls scoring significantly higher than males with tinnitus (p = 0.008). Tinnitus participants rated listening as less pleasant in both quiet (p = 0.036) and high-noise conditions (p = 0.012). Female participants reported greater difficulty under moderate noise (p = 0.030), while EEG data showed higher enjoyment in males (p = 0.005). Salivary amylase increased post-task (p = 0.016), electrodermal activity differed between the initial and final quiet phases (p < 0.001), and heart rate varied according to noise levels (p = 0.008). Negative correlation emerged between subjective and EEG-based pleasantness in the quiet condition.

These findings suggest that tinnitus imposes a measurable cognitive and emotional burden, influenced by both sex and stress responses. They emphasize the need for multimodal, personalized, and gender-sensitive approaches in the assessment and management of tinnitus.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** tinnitus (MONDO:0700322)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Tinnitus (MESH:D014012)

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12277253/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12277253