AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how the number of channels in cochlear implants and the level of background noise affect connected discourse tracking (CDT) in speech comprehension.
  • Results show that CDT rates improve with more channels up to eight, but drop significantly with higher noise levels, indicating that noise impacts speech understanding.
  • The findings suggest that while more channels enhance intelligibility, conventional measures like the Hearing in Noise Test may not accurately reflect the benefits of higher channel counts in noisy environments.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate the effects of number of channels and speech-to-noise ratio on connected discourse tracking (CDT) through simulations of cochlear implant speech processing. Previous studies have used citation-form vowel and consonant materials or simple sentences. CDT rates were expected to be less likely to be limited by ceiling effects and more representative of everyday speech communication.

Design: Four normal-hearing subjects were presented with speech processed through a real-time sine-excited vocoder having three, four, eight, or 12 channels. Amplitude envelopes extracted from each band modulated sinusoidal carrier signals placed at each band center frequency. Speech-spectrum shaped noise was added to speech before vocoder processing at three signal to noise ratios based on real-time measurements of speech level (+7, +12, +17 dB).

Results: CDT rates increased significantly with number of channels up to eight in both quiet and noise, and decreased significantly with each increase in noise level from quiet.

Conclusions: The effects on CDT rates of the number of channels and speech-to-noise ratio are highly correlated with intelligibility measures for Hearing in Noise Test (HINT) sentences, consonants and vowels. However, HINT sentence scores even in noise show ceiling effects that obscure the advantages of processors with eight or more channels. Moderate levels of noise that have only slight effects on other measures significantly affected CDT rate. CDT rates with three or four bands of spectral information were much lower than asymptotic rates, especially in the presence of noise.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00003446-200110000-00007DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

number channels
16
cdt rates
16
channels speech-to-noise
12
speech-to-noise ratio
12
effects number
8
connected discourse
8
discourse tracking
8
cochlear implant
8
implant speech
8
ceiling effects
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!