Descripteurs (mots-clés)



Etendre la recherche sur niveau(x) vers le bas
12-Month Post-Operative Results for Older Children Using Sequential Bilateral Implants / Karyn Louise Galvin in Ear and hearing, Vol.28, n° 2 (Avril 2007)
![]()
[article]
Titre : 12-Month Post-Operative Results for Older Children Using Sequential Bilateral Implants Type de document : Article Auteurs : Karyn Louise Galvin ; Mansze Mok ; Richard C. Dowell ; Robert J. S. Briggs Année de publication : 2007 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Enfant (6-12 ans) ; Enfant implanté ; Implant cochléaire bilatéral ; Perception de la paroleDisponible 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=216837
in Ear and hearing > Vol.28, n° 2 (Avril 2007)[article]Amplitude-mapping effects on speech intelligibility with unilateral and bilateral cochlear implants / Richard van Hoesel in Ear and hearing, Vol.26, n° 4 (Août 2005)
![]()
[article]
Titre : Amplitude-mapping effects on speech intelligibility with unilateral and bilateral cochlear implants Type de document : Article Auteurs : Richard van Hoesel ; Melanie Böhm ; Rolf-Dieter Battmer ; Jens Beckschebe ; Thomas Lenarz Année de publication : 2005 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Implant cochléaire bilatéral ; Implant cochléaire unilatéral ; Intelligibilité de la paroleDisponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=J [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=216738
in Ear and hearing > Vol.26, n° 4 (Août 2005)[article]An Assessment of Parents? Decision-Making Regarding Paediatric Cochlear Implants / J. Cyne Johnston in Revue canadienne dorthophonie et daudiologie (RCOA), Vol. 32, n°4 (2008)
![]()
[article]
Titre : An Assessment of Parents? Decision-Making Regarding Paediatric Cochlear Implants Type de document : Article Auteurs : J. Cyne Johnston ; Andrée Durieux-Smith ; Elizabeth Fitzpatrick ; Annette O'Connor ; Karen Benzies ; Douglas E. Angus Année de publication : 2008 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Enfant déficient auditif ; Enfant implanté ; Implant cochléaire bilatéral ; Implants cochléaires ; Prise de décision ; Relation audiologue patient
Autres descripteurs
Entretien semi structuréDisponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://www.cjslpa.ca/detail.php?ID=971&lang=fr Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=219536
in Revue canadienne dorthophonie et daudiologie (RCOA) > Vol. 32, n°4 (2008)[article]"Aural Patching" After Bilateral Cochlear Implantation Is Challenging for Children With Prior Long-Term Unilateral Implant Experience / Parvaneh Abbasalipour in Ear and hearing, Vol. 41, n°5 (Septembre-octobre 2020)
![]()
[article]
Titre : "Aural Patching" After Bilateral Cochlear Implantation Is Challenging for Children With Prior Long-Term Unilateral Implant Experience Type de document : Article Auteurs : Parvaneh Abbasalipour ; Blake C. Papsin ; Karen A. Gordon Année de publication : 2020 Article en page(s) : p. 1407-1411 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Adolescent ; Implant cochléaire bilatéral ; Patch ; PERCEPTION BINAURALE
Autres descripteurs
AsymetrieRésumé : Objectives: To assess the use of "aural patching" as a strategy to potentially reduce the known persistence of aural preference in children receiving bilateral cochlear implants (CIs) with long inter-implant delays by removing the first device to increase stimulation to the second implanted side.
Design: Children/adolescents who received a second CI at 12.8 +/- 3.5 years of age after 9.4 +/- 2.9 years of unilateral CI use were asked to remove their first CI for regular periods daily (aural patching). Their compliance was monitored, and asymmetries in speech perception were measured at the end of the study period.
Results: Partial adherence to aural patching over the first few months of bilateral hearing use markedly declined with time. As expected, the group demonstrated asymmetries in speech perception that were not significantly affected by the limited aural patching.
Conclusions: The aural patching protocol was a challenge to maintain for most children and families studied, reflecting both the expected aural preference for the first implanted ear and their challenges to reverse it.DOI : 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000824|1 Disponible en ligne : Oui En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=J [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=268375
in Ear and hearing > Vol. 41, n°5 (Septembre-octobre 2020) . - p. 1407-1411[article]Bilateral Cochlear Implants Allow Listeners to Benefit from Visual Information When Talker Location is Varied / Michael F. Dorman in Journal of the American Academy of Audiology (JAAA), Vol.31, n° 7 (July/August 2020)
![]()
[article]
Titre : Bilateral Cochlear Implants Allow Listeners to Benefit from Visual Information When Talker Location is Varied Type de document : Article Auteurs : Michael F. Dorman ; Sarah Natale ; Alissa Knickerbocker Année de publication : 2020 Article en page(s) : p. 547-550 Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteurs : HE Vinci
Audition ; Implant cochléaire bilatéral ; Implants cochléairesRésumé : Background
Previous research has found that when the location of a talker was varied and an auditory prompt indicated the location of the talker, the addition of visual information produced a significant and large improvement in speech understanding for listeners with bilateral cochlear implants (CIs) but not with a unilateral CI. Presumably, the sound-source localization ability of the bilateral CI listeners allowed them to orient to the auditory prompt and benefit from visual information for the subsequent target sentence.
Purpose
The goal of this project was to assess the robustness of previous research by using a different test environment, a different CI, different test material, and a different response measure.
Research Design
Nine listeners fit with bilateral CIs were tested in a simulation of a crowded restaurant. Auditoryvisual (AV) sentence material was presented from loudspeakers and video monitors at 0, +90, and −90 degrees. Each trial started with the presentation of an auditory alerting phrase from one of the three target loudspeakers followed by an AV target sentence from that loudspeaker/monitor. On each trial, the two nontarget monitors showed the speaker mouthing a different sentence. Sentences were presented in noise in four test conditions: one CI, one CI plus vision, bilateral CIs, and bilateral CIs plus vision.
Results
Mean percent words correct for the four test conditions were: one CI, 43%; bilateral CI, 60%; one CI plus vision, 52%; and bilateral CI plus vision, 84%. Visual information did not significantly improve performance in the single CI conditions but did improve performance in the bilateral CI conditions. The magnitude of improvement for two CIs versus one CI in the AV condition was approximately twice that for two CIs versus one CI in the auditory condition.
Conclusions
Our results are consistent with previous data showing the large value of bilateral implants in a complex AV listening environment. The results indicate that the value of bilateral CIs for speech understanding is significantly underestimated in standard, auditory-only, single-speaker, test environments.DOI : 10.1055/s-0040-1709444|1 Disponible en ligne : Oui/Non En ligne : https://login.ezproxy.vinci.be/login?url=https://medone-comsci.thieme.com/ejourn [...] Permalink : https://bib.vinci.be/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=262417
in Journal of the American Academy of Audiology (JAAA) > Vol.31, n° 7 (July/August 2020) . - p. 547-550[article]Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité Journal of the American Academy of Audiology (JAAA). Vol.31, n°7 (July/August 2020) Périodique papier Ixelles Rez Consultation sur place uniquement
Exclu du prêtBilateral cochlear implants in children : localization acuity measured with minimum audible angle / Ruth Y. Litovsky in Ear and hearing, Vol.27, n° 1 (Février 2006)
PermalinkBimodal Hearing or Bilateral Cochlear Implants? Ask the Patient / René H. Gifford in Ear and hearing, Vol. 40, n°3 (mai-juin 2019)
PermalinkCochlear Implants : A Practical Guide / Huw Cooper (2005)
PermalinkA Comparison of Electrical Stimulation Levels Across Ears for Children With Sequential Bilateral Cochlear Implants / Karyn Louise Galvin in Ear and hearing, Vol. 40, n°5 (Septembre octobre 2019)
PermalinkComparison of Speech Recognition and Localization Performance in Bilateral and Unilateral Cochlear Implant Users Matched on Duration of Deafness and Age at Implantation / Camille C. Dunn in Ear and hearing, Vol.29, n° 3 (Juin 2008)
PermalinkDetermining the minimum number of electrodes that need to be pitch matched to accurately estimate pitch matches across the array / Julia Stelmach ; David M. Landsberger ; Monica Padilla ; Justin M. Aronoff in International Journal of Audiology IJA, Vol. 56, n° 1-12 (January-December 2017)
PermalinkDevelopment and Critical Evaluation of a Condition-Specific Preference-Based Measure Sensitive to Binaural Hearing in Adults: The York Binaural Hearing-Related Quality-of-Life System / Quentin Summerfield in Ear and hearing, Vol.43, n°2 (Mars-avril 2022)
PermalinkEffects of speech processing strategy on Chinese tone recognition by Nucleus-24 cochlear implant users / Qian-Jie Fu in Ear and hearing, Vol.25, n° 5 (Octobre 2004)
PermalinkUne étude longitudinale du bénéfice bilatéral chez les enfants porteurs d'implants cochléaires bilatéraux / Filip Asp ; Elina Maki-Torkko ; Eva Karltorp ; [et al.] in International Journal of Audiology IJA, Vol.54, n°1-12 (January-December 2015)
PermalinkFactors affecting phoneme discrimination in children with sequential bilateral cochlear implants / Erva Degirmenci Uzun ; Merve Ozbal Batuk ; Gonca Sennaroglu ; Levent Sennaroglu in International Journal of Audiology IJA, Vol. 61, n°4 (Avril 2022)
Permalink