| Literature DB >> 31572253 |
Barbara Tillmann1,2,3, Bénédicte Poulin-Charronnat1,2,3,4, Etienne Gaudrain1,2,3,5, Idrick Akhoun6, Charles Delbé1,2,3,4, Eric Truy2,3,7, Lionel Collet2,3.
Abstract
Cochlear implant (CI) users can only access limited pitch information through their device, which hinders music appreciation. Poor music perception may not only be due to CI technical limitations; lack of training or negative attitudes toward the electric sound might also contribute to it. Our study investigated with an implicit (indirect) investigation method whether poorly transmitted pitch information, presented as musical chords, can activate listeners' knowledge about musical structures acquired prior to deafness. Seven postlingually deafened adult CI users participated in a musical priming paradigm investigating pitch processing without explicit judgments. Sequences made of eight sung-chords that ended on either a musically related (expected) target chord or a less-related (less-expected) target chord were presented. The use of a priming task based on linguistic features allowed CI patients to perform fast judgments on target chords in the sung music. If listeners' musical knowledge is activated and allows for tonal expectations (as in normal-hearing listeners), faster response times were expected for related targets than less-related targets. However, if the pitch percept is too different and does not activate musical knowledge acquired prior to deafness, storing pitch information in a short-term memory buffer predicts the opposite pattern. If transmitted pitch information is too poor, no difference in response times should be observed. Results showed that CI patients were able to perform the linguistic task on the sung chords, but correct response times indicated sensory priming, with faster response times observed for the less-related targets: CI patients processed at least some of the pitch information of the musical sequences, which was stored in an auditory short-term memory and influenced chord processing. This finding suggests that the signal transmitted via electric hearing led to a pitch percept that was too different from that based on acoustic hearing, so that it did not automatically activate listeners' previously acquired musical structure knowledge. However, the transmitted signal seems sufficiently informative to lead to sensory priming. These findings are encouraging for the development of pitch-related training programs for CI patients, despite the current technological limitations of the CI coding.Entities:
Keywords: auditory sensory memory; cochlear implants; implicit investigation method; music perception; priming
Year: 2019 PMID: 31572253 PMCID: PMC6749036 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01990
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Average data of the 8 control participants in Tillmann et al. (2008) on the left, and their individual data on the right [this group of control participants had a mean age of 65 (±10) years]. For comparable data patterns of group of students, see Bigand et al. (2001) and Tillmann et al. (2008), of groups of children, see Schellenberg et al. (2005), and of another group of control participants as well as their individual data patterns, see Tillmann et al. (2007). Positive and negative values indicate facilitated processing for related and less-related targets, respectively.
Demographics of the seven participants.
| ci_1 | F | 68 | Progressive | 20 | 30 | L | 1 | Y | CI24RE | Freedom SP | ACE 10 max | 1200 Hz |
| ci_2 | F | 69 | Progressive | 25 | 15 | R | 1 | Y | CI24RE | Freedom SP | ACE 12 max | 1200 Hz |
| ci_3 | F | 47 | Congenital and progressive | 10 | 38 | R | 9 | Y | CI24RE | Freedom SP | ACE 12 max | 1200 Hz |
| ci_4 | M | 32 | Early | 56 | 20 | R | 2 | Y | CI24RE | Freedom SP | ACE 10 max | 1200 Hz |
| ci_5 | F | 32 | Early | 66 | 24 | L | 1 | N | CI24RE | Freedom SP | ACE 10 max | 900 Hz |
| ci_6 | F | 30 | Progressive | 25 | 11 | L | 1 | Y | CI24M | Esprit 3G | CIS 12 channels | 900 Hz |
| ci_7 | F | 33 | Progressive | 23 | 21 | L | 1 | Y | CI24RE | Freedom SP | ACE 10 max | 1200 Hz |
FIGURE 2(A) Average spectral correlation (left) and Euclidian distance (right) for the related and less-related condition, and for the two target syllables. Higher correlations, and smaller Euclidian distances, are compatible with more sensory priming. (B) Difference in Fisher transformed tonal contextuality index between related and less-related conditions, as a function of syllable, and global and local decays. The solid line represents the value 0.0 where the two types of context have the same TCI. The dashed lines represent the critical limit beyond which differences can be considered significant.
FIGURE 3Same as Figure 2 for the CI model. (A) Average spectral correlation (left) and Euclidian distance (right) for the related and less-related conditions, and for the two target syllables. Higher correlations, and smaller Euclidian distances, are compatible with more sensory priming. (B) Difference in Fisher transformed tonal contextuality index between related and less-related conditions, as a function of syllable, and global and local decays. The solid line represents the value 0.0 where the two types of context have the same TCI. The dashed lines represent the critical limit beyond which differences can be considered significant.
FIGURE 4Average data of the CI participants on the left and their individual data on the right. Positive and negative values indicate facilitated processing for related and less-related targets, respectively.