| Literature DB >> 27101997 |
Stefano Cosentino1, Robert P Carlyon2, John M Deeks2, Wendy Parkinson3, Julie A Bierer3.
Abstract
Cochlear implant (CI) users have poor temporal pitch perception, as revealed by two key outcomes of rate discrimination tests: (i) rate discrimination thresholds (RDTs) are typically larger than the corresponding frequency difference limen for pure tones in normal hearing listeners, and (ii) above a few hundred pulses per second (i.e. the "upper limit" of pitch), CI users cannot discriminate further increases in pulse rate. Both RDTs at low rates and the upper limit of pitch vary across listeners and across electrodes in a given listener. Here, we compare across-electrode and across-subject variation in these two measures with the variation in performance on another temporal processing task, gap detection, in order to explore the limitations of temporal processing in CI users. RDTs were obtained for 4-5 electrodes in each of 10 Advanced Bionics CI users using two interleaved adaptive tracks, corresponding to standard rates of 100 and 400 pps. Gap detection was measured using the adaptive procedure and stimuli described by Bierer et al. (JARO 16:273-284, 2015), and for the same electrodes and listeners as for the rate discrimination measures. Pitch ranking was also performed using a mid-point comparison technique. There was a marginal across-electrode correlation between gap detection and rate discrimination at 400 pps, but neither measure correlated with rate discrimination at 100 pps. Similarly, there was a highly significant across-subject correlation between gap detection and rate discrimination at 400, but not 100 pps, and these two correlations differed significantly from each other. Estimates of low-rate sensitivity and of the upper limit of pitch, obtained from the pitch ranking experiment, correlated well with rate discrimination for the 100- and 400-pps standards, respectively. The results are consistent with the upper limit of rate discrimination sharing a common basis with gap detection. There was no evidence that this limitation also applied to rate discrimination at lower rates.Entities:
Keywords: cochlear implant; gap detection; interleaved procedure; pitch; rate discrimination
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27101997 PMCID: PMC4940289 DOI: 10.1007/s10162-016-0569-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Assoc Res Otolaryngol ISSN: 1438-7573
Subjects’ details at the time of testing
| ID | Age (years) | Deafness onset (age, years) | Possible aetiology | Months of CI use (years) | Took part in experiment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S22 | 73 | 55 | Hereditary | 5.8 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| S27 | 84 | 55–60 | Unknown | 5.6 | 1a |
| S28 | 75 | 26 | Hereditary | 5.4 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| S30 | 50 | 16 | Hereditary | 10 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| S39 | 50 | 16 | Hereditary | 30 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| S48 | 59 | 36 | Autoimmune disease | 2.5 | 1b, 2 |
| C1 | 68 | 32 | Unknown | 4 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| C2 | 32 | 7 | Unknown | 3 | 1a |
| C3 | 70 | 50 | Otosclerosis | 3 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| C4 | 67 | 37 | Otosclerosis | 5 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| C5 | 54 | 31 | Unknown | 5 | 1a, 2, 3 |
| C6 | 66 | 51 | Unknown | 2 | 1b, 2, 3 |
The four experiments were labelled as follows: 1a – gap detection in Bierer et al. (2015); 1b – gap detection in this study; 2 and 3 are rate discrimination and pitch ranking in this study. Subjects identified with the letter “C” were implanted and tested in Cambridge, UK; those identified with the letter S were implanted and tested in Seattle, USA
FIG. 1GDTs measured in 12 subjects. Except for subjects S48 and C6, the data are the same as in Fig. 3 of Bierer et al. (2015). Note the different ordinate scale (in red) for subject S28.
FIG. 3Average pitch ranks as obtained from the MPC procedure. A graphical representation of the method used to compute upper and lower limit of pitch is shown for subject S39 on E14.
FIG. 2RDRs for ten subjects and for standard rates of 100 pps (blue squares) and 400 pps (black circles). Data analysis was performed on the logarithms of the RDRs, as shown on the left-hand axis. The raw RDRs are indicated on the right-hand axis. Adaptive tracks for S28 on electrode 15 did not converge to a threshold, and these data points were not included.
FIG. 4Scatter plot between normalised RDR 400 and GDT as measured across electrodes.
FIG. 5Scatter plot between RDR 400 and GDT as measured across subjects.