Comparative effects of visual and auditory stimuli on the sensory components of postural control: A study in individuals with sensorineural hearing loss
Hanifi Korkmaz1
, Sevilay Hançer Tecimer2
1Malatya Turgut Özal University, Vocational School of Health Services, Malatya, Türkiye
2Department of Otolaryngology, Malatya Turgut Özal University Faculty of Medicine, Malatya, Türkiye
Keywords: Auditory perception, postural balance, sensorineural hearing loss, sensory integration, virtual reality, visual perception.
Abstract
Objectives: This study examined whether sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) severity affects the sensory components of postural control in asymptomatic young to middle-aged adults under increasing multisensory load using a virtual reality (VR)-based Clinical Test of Sensory Interaction on Balance (CTSIB).
Patients and Methods: Between October 2025 and February 2026, a prospective cross-sectional study was performed on 53 participants (23 males, 30 females; mean age: 26.51±4.27 years; range: 18 to 57 years). Participants were categorized into three groups according to their hearing status: the healthy control group (n = 24), the mild SNHL group (n = 21), and the moderate SNHL group (n = 8). Postural control was assessed under four conditions: C1 (silent-standard vision), C2 (music-standard vision), C3 (silent-optokinetic vision), and C4 (music-optokinetic vision). Composite balance scores and VR-CTSIB sensory subcomponents were analyzed using condition-wise nonparametric tests. Subjective workload was evaluated using the mental demand and effort subscales of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Task Load Index.
Results: Composite balance performance differed between groups in a condition-dependent manner, with greater separation under higher multisensory load. Somatosensory and visual components showed increasing group differences, whereas vestibular-based strategies diverged only under multisensory conflict. Visual preference differed only in the music-standard vision condition, indicating a context-dependent shift in sensory weighting. Subjective workload increased with sensory conflict, while between-group differences diminished under the highest load.
Conclusion: In asymptomatic adults, hearing loss is associated with condition-specific postural control vulnerability that emerges under auditory-visual sensory conflict, supporting impaired sensory reweighting rather than a global balance deficit. Virtual reality-based CTSIB protocols provide a sensitive framework for detecting these effects.
Citation: Korkmaz H, Hançer Tecimer S. Comparative effects of visual and auditory stimuli on the sensory components of postural control: A study in individuals with sensorineural hearing loss. Praxis Otorhinolaryngol 2026;14(2):122-133. https://doi. org/10.5606/kbbu.2026.30922.