| Literature DB >> 25435816 |
Mario A Svirsky1, Nai Ding1, Elad Sagi1, Chin-Tuan Tan1, Matthew Fitzgerald1, E Katelyn Glassman1, Keena Seward1, Arlene C Neuman1.
Abstract
Acoustic models have been used in numerous studies over the past thirty years to simulate the percepts elicited by auditory neural prostheses. In these acoustic models, incoming signals are processed the same way as in a cochlear implant speech processor. The percepts that would be caused by electrical stimulation in a real cochlear implant are simulated by modulating the amplitude of either noise bands or sinusoids. Despite their practical usefulness these acoustic models have never been convincingly validated. This study presents a tool to conduct such validation using subjects who have a cochlear implant in one ear and have near perfect hearing in the other ear, allowing for the first time a direct perceptual comparison of the output of acoustic models to the stimulation provided by a cochlear implant.Entities:
Keywords: Acoustic models; Cochlear implants; Sensory aids; Single sided deafness; Speech processing
Year: 2013 PMID: 25435816 PMCID: PMC4244817 DOI: 10.1109/ICASSP.2013.6639350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc IEEE Int Conf Acoust Speech Signal Process ISSN: 1520-6149