The discrimination of voice cues in simulations of bimodal electro-acoustic cochlear-implant hearing.

Journal: The Journal Of The Acoustical Society Of America
Published:
Abstract

In discriminating speakers' voices, normal-hearing individuals effectively use two vocal characteristics, vocal pitch (related to fundamental frequency, F0) and vocal-tract length (VTL, related to speaker size). Typical cochlear-implant users show poor perception of these cues. However, in implant users with low-frequency residual acoustic hearing, this bimodal electro-acoustic stimulation may provide additional voice-related cues, such as low-numbered harmonics and formants, which could improve F0/VTL perception. In acoustic noise-vocoder simulations, where added low-pass filtered speech simulated residual hearing, a strong bimodal benefit was observed for F0 perception. No bimodal benefit was observed for VTL, which seems to mainly rely on vocoder spectral resolution.

Authors
Deniz Başkent, Annika Luckmann, Jessy Ceha, Etienne Gaudrain, Terrin Tamati
Relevant Conditions

Hearing Loss