Objectives: We compared sound quality and performance for a conventional cochlear-implant (CI) audio processing strategy based on short-time fast-Fourier transform (Crystalis) and an experimental strategy based on spectral feature extraction (SFE). In the latter, the more salient spectral features (acoustic events) were extracted and mapped into the CI stimulation electrodes. We hypothesized that (1) SFE would be superior to Crystalis because it can encode acoustic spectral features without the constraints imposed by the short-time fast-Fourier transform bin width, and (2) the potential benefit of SFE would be greater for CI users who have less neural cross-channel interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExposure to brief, intense sound can produce profound changes in the auditory system, from the internal structure of inner hair cells to reduced synaptic connections between the auditory nerves and the inner hair cells. Moreover, noisy environments can also lead to alterations in the auditory nerve or to processing changes in the auditory midbrain, all without affecting hearing thresholds. This so-called hidden hearing loss (HHL) has been shown in tinnitus patients and has been posited to account for hearing difficulties in noisy environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComputational models are useful tools to investigate scientific questions that would be complicated to address using an experimental approach. In the context of cochlear-implants (CIs), being able to simulate the neural activity evoked by these devices could help in understanding their limitations to provide natural hearing. Here, we present a computational modelling framework to quantify the transmission of information from sound to spikes in the auditory nerve of a CI user.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a theoretical study aimed at investigating the impact of cochlear synapse loss (synaptopathy) on the encoding of the envelope (ENV) and temporal fine structure (TFS) of sounds by the population of auditory nerve fibers. A computational model was used to simulate auditory-nerve spike trains evoked by sinusoidally amplitude-modulated (AM) tones at 10 Hz with various carrier frequencies and levels. The model included 16 cochlear channels with characteristic frequencies (CFs) from 250 Hz to 8 kHz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCentral gain compensation for reduced auditory nerve output has been hypothesized as a mechanism for tinnitus with a normal audiogram. Here, we investigate if gain compensation occurs with aging. For 94 people (aged 12-68 years, 64 women, 7 tinnitus) with normal or close-to-normal audiograms, the amplitude of wave I of the auditory brainstem response decreased with increasing age but was not correlated with wave V amplitude after accounting for age-related subclinical hearing loss and cochlear damage, a result indicative of age-related gain compensation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe roles of the medial olivocochlear reflex (MOCR) in human hearing have been widely investigated but remain controversial. We reason that this may be because the effects of MOCR activation on cochlear mechanical responses can be assessed only indirectly in healthy humans, and the different methods used to assess those effects possibly yield different and/or unreliable estimates. One aim of this study was to investigate the correlation between three methods often employed to assess the strength of MOCR activation by contralateral acoustic stimulation (CAS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCochlear synaptopathy (or the loss of primary auditory synapses) remains a subclinical condition of uncertain prevalence. Here, we investigate whether it affects humans and whether it contributes to suprathreshold speech-in-noise intelligibility deficits. For 94 human listeners with normal audiometry (aged 12-68 years; 64 women), we measured click-evoked auditory brainstem responses (ABRs), self-reported lifetime noise exposure, and speech reception thresholds for sentences (at 65 dB SPL) and words (at 50, 65 and 80 dB SPL) in steady-state and fluctuating maskers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver 360 million people worldwide suffer from disabling hearing loss. Most of them can be treated with hearing aids. Unfortunately, performance with hearing aids and the benefit obtained from using them vary widely across users.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to assess the relative importance of cochlear mechanical dysfunction, temporal processing deficits, and age on the ability of hearing-impaired listeners to understand speech in noisy backgrounds. Sixty-eight listeners took part in the study. They were provided with linear, frequency-specific amplification to compensate for their audiometric losses, and intelligibility was assessed for speech-shaped noise (SSN) and a time-reversed two-talker masker (R2TM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study aimed at characterizing the suppressing effect of contralateral medial olivocochlear (MOC) efferents on human auditory sensitivity and mechanical cochlear responses at sound levels near behavioral thresholds. Absolute thresholds for pure tones of 500 and 4000 Hz with durations between 10-500 ms were measured in the presence and in the absence of a contralateral broadband noise. The intensity of the noise was fixed at 60 dB SPL to evoke the contralateral MOC reflex without evoking the middle-ear muscle reflex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe temporal masking curve (TMC) method is a behavioral technique for inferring human cochlear compression. The method relies on the assumptions that in the absence of compression, forward-masking recovery is independent of masker level and probe frequency. The present study aimed at testing the validity of these assumptions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIdentifying the multiple contributors to the audiometric loss of a hearing impaired (HI) listener at a particular frequency is becoming gradually more useful as new treatments are developed. Here, we infer the contribution of inner (IHC) and outer hair cell (OHC) dysfunction to the total audiometric loss in a sample of 68 hearing aid candidates with mild-to-severe sensorineural hearing loss, and for test frequencies of 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 6 kHz.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn binaural listening, the two cochleae do not act as independent sound receptors; their functioning is linked via the contralateral medial olivo-cochlear reflex (MOCR), which can be activated by contralateral sounds. The present study aimed at characterizing the effect of a contralateral white noise (CWN) on psychophysical tuning curves (PTCs). PTCs were measured in forward masking for probe frequencies of 500 Hz and 4 kHz, with and without CWN.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To evaluate serum human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) ratio, progesterone and inhibin A as single parameters and in combination for the prediction of spontaneous resolution of pregnancies of unknown location (PUL).
Study Design: Prospective observational study of 105 consecutive patients with a diagnosis of PUL. Serum levels of hCG, progesterone and inhibin A were determined at the first visit and after 2 days.
Differentiating the relative importance of the various contributors to the audiometric loss (HL(TOTAL)) of a given hearing impaired listener and frequency region is becoming critical as more specific treatments are being developed. The aim of the present study was to assess the relative contribution of inner (IHC) and outer hair cell (OHC) dysfunction (HL(IHC) and HL(OHC), respectively) to the audiometric loss of patients with mild to moderate cochlear hearing loss. It was assumed that HL(TOTAL) = HL(OHC) + HL(IHC) (all in decibels) and that HL(OHC) may be estimated as the reduction in maximum cochlear gain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious studies have shown a high within-subject correspondence between distortion product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) input/output (I/O) curves and behaviorally inferred basilar membrane (BM) I/O curves for frequencies above approximately 2 kHz. For lower frequencies, DPOAE I/O curves contained notches and plateaus that did not have a counterpart in corresponding behavioral curves. It was hypothesized that this might improve by using individualized optimal DPOAE primary levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Assoc Res Otolaryngol
December 2009
When two pure tones (or primaries) of slightly different frequencies (f (1) and f (2)) are presented to the ear, new frequency components are generated by nonlinear interaction of the primaries within the cochlea. These new components can be recorded in the ear canal as otoacoustic emissions (OAE). The level of the 2f (1)-f (2) OAE component is known as the distortion product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) and is regarded as an indicator of the physiological state of the cochlea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim was to investigate the correlation between compression exponent, compression threshold, and cochlear gain for normal-hearing subjects as inferred from temporal masking curves (TMCs) and distortion-product otoacoustic emission (DPOAEs) input-output (I/O) curves. Care was given to reduce the influence of DPOAE fine structure on the DPOAE I/O curves. A high correlation between compression exponent estimates obtained with the two methods was found at 4 kHz but not at 0.
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