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Acoustic Hearing Can Interfere With Single-Sided Deafness Cochlear-Implant Speech Perception / Joshua G. W. Bernstein in Ear and hearing, Vol. 41, n°4 (Juillet-aout 2020)
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Titre : Acoustic Hearing Can Interfere With Single-Sided Deafness Cochlear-Implant Speech Perception Type de document : Article Auteurs : Joshua G. W. Bernstein ; Olga A. Stakhovskaya ; Kenneth Kragh Jensen ; Matthew J. Goupell Année de publication : 2020 Article en page(s) : p. 747-761 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Audition binaurale ; Implants cochléaires ; Masquage ; Perte auditive unilatérale (USNHL) ; Sujet âgé
Autres descripteurs
Appareillage asymetrique ; Attention selectiveRésumé : Objectives: Cochlear implants (CIs) restore some spatial advantages for speech understanding in noise to individuals with single-sided deafness (SSD). In addition to a head-shadow advantage when the CI ear has a better signal-to-noise ratio, a CI can also provide a binaural advantage in certain situations, facilitating the perceptual separation of spatially separated concurrent voices. While some bilateral-CI listeners show a similar binaural advantage, bilateral-CI listeners with relatively large asymmetries in monaural speech understanding can instead experience contralateral speech interference. Based on the interference previously observed for asymmetric bilateral-CI listeners, this study tested the hypothesis that in a multiple-talker situation, the acoustic ear would interfere with rather than improve CI speech understanding for SSD-CI listeners.
Design: Experiment 1 measured CI-ear speech understanding in the presence of competing speech or noise for 13 SSD-CI listeners. Target speech from the closed-set coordinate response-measure corpus was presented to the CI ear along with one same-gender competing talker or stationary noise at target-to-masker ratios between -8 and 20 dB. The acoustic ear was presented with silence (monaural condition) or with a copy of the competing speech or noise (bilateral condition). Experiment 2 tested a subset of 6 listeners in the reverse configuration for which SSD-CI listeners have previously shown a binaural benefit (target and competing speech presented to the acoustic ear; silence or competing speech presented to the CI ear). Experiment 3 examined the possible influence of a methodological difference between experiments 1 and 2: whether the competing talker spoke keywords that were inside or outside the response set. For each experiment, the data were analyzed using repeated-measures logistic regression. For experiment 1, a correlation analysis compared the difference between bilateral and monaural speech-understanding scores to several listener-specific factors: speech understanding in the CI ear, preimplantation duration of deafness, duration of CI experience, ear of deafness (left/right), acoustic-ear audiometric thresholds, and listener age.
Results: In experiment 1, presenting a copy of the competing speech to the acoustic ear reduced CI speech-understanding scores for target-to-masker ratios >=4 dB. This interference effect was limited to competing-speech conditions and was not observed for a noise masker. There was dramatic intersubject variability in the magnitude of the interference (range: 1 to 43 rationalized arcsine units), which was found to be significantly correlated with listener age. The interference effect contrasted sharply with the reverse configuration (experiment 2), whereby presenting a copy of the competing speech to the contralateral CI ear significantly improved performance relative to monaural acoustic-ear performance. Keyword condition (experiment 3) did not influence the observed pattern of interference.
Conclusions: Most SSD-CI listeners experienced interference when they attended to the CI ear and competing speech was added to the acoustic ear, although there was a large amount of intersubject variability in the magnitude of the effect, with older listeners particularly susceptible to interference. While further research is needed to investigate these effects under free-field listening conditions, these results suggest that for certain spatial configurations in a multiple-talker situation, contralateral speech interference could reduce the benefit that an SSD-CI otherwise provides.Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=http://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=256676
in Ear and hearing > Vol. 41, n°4 (Juillet-aout 2020) . - p. 747-761[article]An improved method of reducing stimulus artifact in the electrically evoked whole-nerve potential / Charles A. Miller in Ear and hearing, Vol.21, n° 4 (Août 2000)
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Titre : An improved method of reducing stimulus artifact in the electrically evoked whole-nerve potential Type de document : Article Auteurs : Charles A. Miller ; Paul J. Abbas ; Carolyn J. Brown Année de publication : 2000 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Implants cochléaires ; Masquage ; Potentiel évoqué auditif (PEA)Mots-clés : Nucleus CI24 Disponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=216457
in Ear and hearing > Vol.21, n° 4 (Août 2000)[article]An Introduction to the psychology of hearing / Brian C. J. Moore (2013)
Titre : An Introduction to the psychology of hearing Type de document : Livre Auteurs : Brian C. J. Moore Mention d'édition : 6e éd.- Editeur : Leiden : Brill Année de publication : 2013 Importance : 441 p. Format : 23 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-90-04-25242-4 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Fréquence sonore ; Intensité sonore ; Masquage ; Perception auditive ; Perception de la parole ; Perception du son ; Perception spatiale ; Seuil auditif
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Fonctionnement auditif ; Qualite du son percu ; Traitement temporelDisponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=206280 Exemplaires (1)
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DisponibleAudiology : Diagnosis / Holly Hosford-Dunn (2000)
Titre : Audiology : Diagnosis Type de document : Livre Auteurs : Holly Hosford-Dunn ; Ross Roeser ; Michael Valente Editeur : New York, Stuttgart : Georg Thieme Année de publication : 2000 Importance : 640 p. Présentation : ill Format : 29 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 3-13-116431-x Prix : 99.95 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Anatomie du système auditif ; Audiométrie ; Déficience auditive ; Diagnostic auditif ; Masquage ; Physiologie de l'audition ; Psychoacoustique ; Son pur
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Application cliniqueDisponible en ligne : Non Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=202375 Exemplaires (1)
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Titre : Audiology : Diagnosis Type de document : Livre Auteurs : Holly Hosford-Dunn ; Ross Roeser ; Michael Valente Mention d'édition : 2é éd. Editeur : New York, Stuttgart : Georg Thieme Année de publication : 2007 Importance : 640 p. Présentation : ill Format : 29 cm Prix : 99.95 Note générale : doi:10.1055/b-006-161057 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Anatomie du système auditif ; Audiométrie ; Déficience auditive ; Diagnostic auditif ; Masquage ; Physiologie de l'audition ; Psychoacoustique ; Son pur
Autres descripteurs
Application cliniqueDisponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://medone-comsci.thieme.com/ebooks [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=301212 Audiology : science to practice / Steven Kramer (2013)
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PermalinkBrain stem and cortical mechanisms underlying the binaural masking level difference in humans : an auditory steady-state response study / Winnie Y.S. Wong in Ear and hearing, Vol.25, n° 1 (Février 2004)
PermalinkClinical masking procedures / William S. Yacullo (1996)
PermalinkCochlear mechanics / Franck Böhnke (1999)
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PermalinkA Cross-Language Comparison of Sentence Recognition Using American English and Mandarin Chinese HINT and AzBio Sentences / Li Xu in Ear and hearing, Vol. 42, n°2 (Mars-Avril 2021)
PermalinkDead regions in the cochlea : conceptual foundations, diagnosis, and clinical applications / Brian C. J. Moore in Ear and hearing, Vol.25, n° 2 (Avril 2004)
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