Friday, January 7, 2011

Bimodal vs. Bilateral

The online CI community is all a-buzz (and honestly I am too) over the newly published research on Bimodal vs. Bilateral performance in this month's Ear and Hearing. Why do I have the urge to scream 'I TOLD YOU SO!" after reading this?

Ear & Hearing:
February 2011 - Volume 32 - Issue 1 - pp 16-30
doi: 10.1097/AUD.0b013e3181edfbd2
Research Articles

Comparison of Bimodal and Bilateral Cochlear Implant Users on Speech Recognition With Competing Talker, Music Perception, Affective Prosody Discrimination, and Talker Identification

Cullington, Helen E.1; Zeng, Fan-Gang2

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Abstract

Objectives: Despite excellent performance in speech recognition in quiet, most cochlear implant users have great difficulty with speech recognition in noise, music perception, identifying tone of voice, and discriminating different talkers. This may be partly due to the pitch coding in cochlear implant speech processing. Most current speech processing strategies use only the envelope information; the temporal fine structure is discarded. One way to improve electric pitch perception is to use residual acoustic hearing via a hearing aid on the nonimplanted ear (bimodal hearing). This study aimed to test the hypothesis that bimodal users would perform better than bilateral cochlear implant users on tasks requiring good pitch perception.
Design: Four pitch-related tasks were used.
1. Hearing in Noise Test (HINT) sentences spoken by a male talker with a competing female, male, or child talker.
2. Montreal Battery of Evaluation of Amusia. This is a music test with six subtests examining pitch, rhythm and timing perception, and musical memory.
3. Aprosodia Battery. This has five subtests evaluating aspects of affective prosody and recognition of sarcasm.
4. Talker identification using vowels spoken by 10 different talkers (three men, three women, two boys, and two girls).
Bilateral cochlear implant users were chosen as the comparison group. Thirteen bimodal and 13 bilateral adult cochlear implant users were recruited; all had good speech perception in quiet.
Results: There were no significant differences between the mean scores of the bimodal and bilateral groups on any of the tests, although the bimodal group did perform better than the bilateral group on almost all tests. Performance on the different pitch-related tasks was not correlated, meaning that if a subject performed one task well they would not necessarily perform well on another. The correlation between the bimodal users' hearing threshold levels in the aided ear and their performance on these tasks was weak.
Conclusions: Although the bimodal cochlear implant group performed better than the bilateral group on most parts of the four pitch-related tests, the differences were not statistically significant. The lack of correlation between test results shows that the tasks used are not simply providing a measure of pitch ability. Even if the bimodal users have better pitch perception, the real-world tasks used are reflecting more diverse skills than pitch. This research adds to the existing speech perception, language, and localization studies that show no significant difference between bimodal and bilateral cochlear implant users.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Growing with powerful analogs then digital, i've always felt that analog do alot better with music. I wonder if they test that with implant.

MB said...

Agreed! I feel all the CI companies are pushing bilateral so much lately, and I have to defend our decision to people. Of course bilateral is best for those profoundly deaf in both ears, but not everyone fits that model!

MB said...

(Not to mention I love that the residual hearing helps out at bath and swim time!)