The Spatial Selective Auditory Attention of Cochlear Implant Users in Different Conversational Sound Levels

被引:0
|
作者
Akbarzadeh, Sara [1 ]
Lee, Sungmin [2 ]
Tan, Chin-Tuan [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Dallas, Dept Elect & Comp Engn, Richardson, TX 75080 USA
[2] Tongmyong Univ, Dept Speech Language Pathol & Audiol, Busan 48520, South Korea
关键词
cochlear implant; cocktail party scenario; selective auditory attention; speech recognition; NORMAL-HEARING; FREQUENCY-SELECTIVITY; SPEECH; DISCRIMINATION; LISTENERS; LOCALIZATION; RECOGNITION; SEPARATION; CHILDREN; RELEASE;
D O I
10.3390/jcm10143078
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
In multi-speaker environments, cochlear implant (CI) users may attend to a target sound source in a different manner from normal hearing (NH) individuals during a conversation. This study attempted to investigate the effect of conversational sound levels on the mechanisms adopted by CI and NH listeners in selective auditory attention and how it affects their daily conversation. Nine CI users (five bilateral, three unilateral, and one bimodal) and eight NH listeners participated in this study. The behavioral speech recognition scores were collected using a matrix sentences test, and neural tracking to speech envelope was recorded using electroencephalography (EEG). Speech stimuli were presented at three different levels (75, 65, and 55 dB SPL) in the presence of two maskers from three spatially separated speakers. Different combinations of assisted/impaired hearing modes were evaluated for CI users, and the outcomes were analyzed in three categories: electric hearing only, acoustic hearing only, and electric + acoustic hearing. Our results showed that increasing the conversational sound level degraded the selective auditory attention in electrical hearing. On the other hand, increasing the sound level improved the selective auditory attention for the acoustic hearing group. In the NH listeners, however, increasing the sound level did not cause a significant change in the auditory attention. Our result implies that the effect of the sound level on selective auditory attention varies depending on the hearing modes, and the loudness control is necessary for the ease of attending to the conversation by CI users.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The Implication of Sound Level on Spatial Selective Auditory Attention for Cochlear Implant Users: Behavioral and Electrophysiological Measurement
    Akbarzadeh, Sara
    Lee, Sungmin
    Tan, Chin-Tuan
    INTERSPEECH 2020, 2020, : 2497 - 2501
  • [2] Electrophysiological evidence for altered visual, but not auditory, selective attention in adolescent cochlear implant users
    Harris, Jill
    Kamke, Marc R.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY, 2014, 78 (11) : 1908 - 1916
  • [3] Auditory Attention and Spatial Unmasking in Children With Cochlear Implants
    Misurelli, Sara M.
    Goupell, Matthew J.
    Burg, Emily A.
    Jocewicz, Rachael
    Kan, Alan
    Litovsky, Ruth Y.
    TRENDS IN HEARING, 2020, 24
  • [4] Selective attention decoding in bimodal cochlear implant users
    Dolhopiatenko, Hanna
    Nogueira, Waldo
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2023, 16
  • [5] Auditory selective attention in cochlear implant users:: An event-related potential study
    Bohrer, I
    Lesinski-Schiedat, A
    Böhm, M
    Büchner, A
    Dengler, R
    Lenarz, T
    Münte, TF
    Nager, W
    KLINISCHE NEUROPHYSIOLOGIE, 2004, 35 (02) : 69 - 73
  • [6] Spatial attention in bilateral cochlear-implant users
    Goupell, Matthew J.
    Kan, Alan
    Litovsky, Ruth Y.
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2016, 140 (03) : 1652 - 1662
  • [7] Auditory Reasoning Skills of Cochlear Implant Users
    Aslan, Filiz
    Yucel, Esra
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ADVANCED OTOLOGY, 2019, 15 (01) : 70 - 76
  • [8] An event-related brain potential study of auditory attention in cochlear implant users
    Schierholz, Irina
    Schoenermark, Constanze
    Ruigendijk, Esther
    Kral, Andrej
    Kopp, Bruno
    Buechner, Andreas
    CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2021, 132 (09) : 2290 - 2305
  • [9] Sound therapy for cochlear implant users with tinnitus
    van Heteren, Jan A. A.
    Arts, Remo A. G. J.
    Killian, Matthijs J. P.
    Assouly, Kelly K. S.
    van de Wauw, Cynthia
    Stokroos, Robert J.
    Smit, Adriana L.
    George, Erwin L. J.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AUDIOLOGY, 2021, 60 (05) : 374 - 384
  • [10] Auditory cortical activity to different voice onset times in cochlear implant users
    Han, Ji-Hye
    Zhang, Fawen
    Kadis, Darren S.
    Houston, Lisa M.
    Samy, Ravi N.
    Smith, Michael L.
    Dimitrijevic, Andrew
    CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2016, 127 (02) : 1603 - 1617