Lexical effects on talker discrimination in adult cochlear implant users

Author:

Tamati Terrin N.12,Jebens Almut2,Başkent Deniz23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology, Vanderbilt University Medical Center 1 , 1215 21st Ave S, Nashville, Tennessee 37232, USA

2. Department of Otorhinolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen 2 , Groningen, The Netherlands

3. Research School of Behavioral and Cognitive Neurosciences, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, University of Groningen 3 , Groningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

The lexical and phonological content of an utterance impacts the processing of talker-specific details in normal-hearing (NH) listeners. Adult cochlear implant (CI) users demonstrate difficulties in talker discrimination, particularly for same-gender talker pairs, which may alter the reliance on lexical information in talker discrimination. The current study examined the effect of lexical content on talker discrimination in 24 adult CI users. In a remote AX talker discrimination task, word pairs–produced either by the same talker (ST) or different talkers with the same (DT-SG) or mixed genders (DT-MG)–were either lexically easy (high frequency, low neighborhood density) or lexically hard (low frequency, high neighborhood density). The task was completed in quiet and multi-talker babble (MTB). Results showed an effect of lexical difficulty on talker discrimination, for same-gender talker pairs in both quiet and MTB. CI users showed greater sensitivity in quiet as well as less response bias in both quiet and MTB for lexically easy words compared to lexically hard words. These results suggest that CI users make use of lexical content in same-gender talker discrimination, providing evidence for the contribution of linguistic information to the processing of degraded talker information by adult CI users.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

American Hearing Research Foundation

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Publisher

Acoustical Society of America (ASA)

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