Searching for the Sound of a Cochlear Implant: Evaluation of Different Vocoder Parameters by Cochlear Implant Users With Single-Sided Deafness

Author:

Karoui Chadlia12ORCID,James Chris23,Barone Pascal1,Bakhos David45ORCID,Marx Mathieu13,Macherey Olivier6

Affiliation:

1. Centre de Recherche Cerveau et Cognition, Toulouse, France

2. Cochlear France SAS, Toulouse, France

3. Department of Otology-Neurotology and Skull Base Surgery, Purpan University Hospital, Toulouse, France

4. Université François-Rabelais de Tours, CHRU de Tours, France

5. Ear Nose and Throat department, CHUR de Tours, Tours, France

6. Aix Marseille University, CNRS, Centrale Marseille, LMA, Marseille, France

Abstract

Cochlear implantation in subjects with single-sided deafness (SSD) offers a unique opportunity to directly compare the percepts evoked by a cochlear implant (CI) with those evoked acoustically. Here, nine SSD-CI users performed a forced-choice task evaluating the similarity of speech processed by their CI with speech processed by several vocoders presented to their healthy ear. In each trial, subjects heard two intervals: their CI followed by a certain vocoder in Interval 1 and their CI followed by a different vocoder in Interval 2. The vocoders differed either (i) in carrier type—(sinusoidal [SINE], bandfiltered noise [NOISE], and pulse-spreading harmonic complex) or (ii) in frequency mismatch between the analysis and synthesis frequency ranges—(no mismatch, and two frequency-mismatched conditions of 2 and 4 equivalent rectangular bandwidths [ERBs]). Subjects had to state in which of the two intervals the CI and vocoder sounds were more similar. Despite a large intersubject variability, the PSHC vocoder was judged significantly more similar to the CI than SINE or NOISE vocoders. Furthermore, the No-mismatch and 2-ERB mismatch vocoders were judged significantly more similar to the CI than the 4-ERB mismatch vocoder. The mismatch data were also interpreted by comparing spiral ganglion characteristic frequencies with electrode contact positions determined from postoperative computed tomography scans. Only one subject demonstrated a pattern of preference consistent with adaptation to the CI sound processor frequency-to-electrode allocation table and two subjects showed possible partial adaptation. Those subjects with adaptation patterns presented overall small and consistent frequency mismatches across their electrode arrays.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Otorhinolaryngology

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