The Benefits of Residual Hair Cell Function for Speech and Music Perception in Pediatric Bimodal Cochlear Implant Listeners

Joint Authors

Shu, Yi-lai
Cheng, Xiaoting
Liu, Yangwenyi
Wang, Bing
Yuan, Yasheng
Fu, Qian-Jie
Chen, Bing
Galvin, John

Source

Neural Plasticity

Issue

Vol. 2018, Issue 2018 (31 Dec. 2018), pp.1-10, 10 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2018-04-15

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

10

Main Subjects

Biology
Medicine

Abstract EN

Objective.

The aim of this study was to investigate the benefits of residual hair cell function for speech and music perception in bimodal pediatric Mandarin-speaking cochlear implant (CI) listeners.

Design.

Speech and music performance was measured in 35 Mandarin-speaking pediatric CI users for unilateral (CI-only) and bimodal listening.

Mandarin speech perception was measured for vowels, consonants, lexical tones, and sentences in quiet.

Music perception was measured for melodic contour identification (MCI).

Results.

Combined electric and acoustic hearing significantly improved MCI and Mandarin tone recognition performance, relative to CI-only performance.

For MCI, performance was significantly better with bimodal listening for all semitone spacing conditions (p<0.05 in all cases).

For tone recognition, bimodal performance was significantly better only for tone 2 (rising; p<0.05).

There were no significant differences between CI-only and CI + HA for vowel, consonant, or sentence recognition.

Conclusions.

The results suggest that combined electric and acoustic hearing can significantly improve perception of music and Mandarin tones in pediatric Mandarin-speaking CI patients.

Music and lexical tone perception depends strongly on pitch perception, and the contralateral acoustic hearing coming from residual hair cell function provided pitch cues that are generally not well preserved in electric hearing.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Cheng, Xiaoting& Liu, Yangwenyi& Wang, Bing& Yuan, Yasheng& Galvin, John& Fu, Qian-Jie…[et al.]. 2018. The Benefits of Residual Hair Cell Function for Speech and Music Perception in Pediatric Bimodal Cochlear Implant Listeners. Neural Plasticity،Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-10.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210102

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Cheng, Xiaoting…[et al.]. The Benefits of Residual Hair Cell Function for Speech and Music Perception in Pediatric Bimodal Cochlear Implant Listeners. Neural Plasticity No. 2018 (2018), pp.1-10.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210102

American Medical Association (AMA)

Cheng, Xiaoting& Liu, Yangwenyi& Wang, Bing& Yuan, Yasheng& Galvin, John& Fu, Qian-Jie…[et al.]. The Benefits of Residual Hair Cell Function for Speech and Music Perception in Pediatric Bimodal Cochlear Implant Listeners. Neural Plasticity. 2018. Vol. 2018, no. 2018, pp.1-10.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1210102

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1210102