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Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation

For deaf individuals with residual low-frequency acoustic hearing, combined use of a cochlear implant (CI) and hearing aid (HA) typically provides better speech understanding than with either device alone. Because of coarse spectral resolution, CIs do not provide fundamental frequency (F0) informati...

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Autores principales: Li, Yongxin, Zhang, Guoping, Galvin, John J., Fu, Qian-Jie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4227806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25386962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112471
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author Li, Yongxin
Zhang, Guoping
Galvin, John J.
Fu, Qian-Jie
author_facet Li, Yongxin
Zhang, Guoping
Galvin, John J.
Fu, Qian-Jie
author_sort Li, Yongxin
collection PubMed
description For deaf individuals with residual low-frequency acoustic hearing, combined use of a cochlear implant (CI) and hearing aid (HA) typically provides better speech understanding than with either device alone. Because of coarse spectral resolution, CIs do not provide fundamental frequency (F0) information that contributes to understanding of tonal languages such as Mandarin Chinese. The HA can provide good representation of F0 and, depending on the range of aided acoustic hearing, first and second formant (F1 and F2) information. In this study, Mandarin tone, vowel, and consonant recognition in quiet and noise was measured in 12 adult Mandarin-speaking bimodal listeners with the CI-only and with the CI+HA. Tone recognition was significantly better with the CI+HA in noise, but not in quiet. Vowel recognition was significantly better with the CI+HA in quiet, but not in noise. There was no significant difference in consonant recognition between the CI-only and the CI+HA in quiet or in noise. There was a wide range in bimodal benefit, with improvements often greater than 20 percentage points in some tests and conditions. The bimodal benefit was compared to CI subjects’ HA-aided pure-tone average (PTA) thresholds between 250 and 2000 Hz; subjects were divided into two groups: “better” PTA (<50 dB HL) or “poorer” PTA (>50 dB HL). The bimodal benefit differed significantly between groups only for consonant recognition. The bimodal benefit for tone recognition in quiet was significantly correlated with CI experience, suggesting that bimodal CI users learn to better combine low-frequency spectro-temporal information from acoustic hearing with temporal envelope information from electric hearing. Given the small number of subjects in this study (n = 12), further research with Chinese bimodal listeners may provide more information regarding the contribution of acoustic and electric hearing to tonal language perception.
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spelling pubmed-42278062014-11-18 Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation Li, Yongxin Zhang, Guoping Galvin, John J. Fu, Qian-Jie PLoS One Research Article For deaf individuals with residual low-frequency acoustic hearing, combined use of a cochlear implant (CI) and hearing aid (HA) typically provides better speech understanding than with either device alone. Because of coarse spectral resolution, CIs do not provide fundamental frequency (F0) information that contributes to understanding of tonal languages such as Mandarin Chinese. The HA can provide good representation of F0 and, depending on the range of aided acoustic hearing, first and second formant (F1 and F2) information. In this study, Mandarin tone, vowel, and consonant recognition in quiet and noise was measured in 12 adult Mandarin-speaking bimodal listeners with the CI-only and with the CI+HA. Tone recognition was significantly better with the CI+HA in noise, but not in quiet. Vowel recognition was significantly better with the CI+HA in quiet, but not in noise. There was no significant difference in consonant recognition between the CI-only and the CI+HA in quiet or in noise. There was a wide range in bimodal benefit, with improvements often greater than 20 percentage points in some tests and conditions. The bimodal benefit was compared to CI subjects’ HA-aided pure-tone average (PTA) thresholds between 250 and 2000 Hz; subjects were divided into two groups: “better” PTA (<50 dB HL) or “poorer” PTA (>50 dB HL). The bimodal benefit differed significantly between groups only for consonant recognition. The bimodal benefit for tone recognition in quiet was significantly correlated with CI experience, suggesting that bimodal CI users learn to better combine low-frequency spectro-temporal information from acoustic hearing with temporal envelope information from electric hearing. Given the small number of subjects in this study (n = 12), further research with Chinese bimodal listeners may provide more information regarding the contribution of acoustic and electric hearing to tonal language perception. Public Library of Science 2014-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4227806/ /pubmed/25386962 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112471 Text en © 2014 Li et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Li, Yongxin
Zhang, Guoping
Galvin, John J.
Fu, Qian-Jie
Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation
title Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation
title_full Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation
title_fullStr Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation
title_full_unstemmed Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation
title_short Mandarin Speech Perception in Combined Electric and Acoustic Stimulation
title_sort mandarin speech perception in combined electric and acoustic stimulation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4227806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25386962
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0112471
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