| Literature DB >> 9723768 |
M C Langereis1, A J Bosman, A F van Olphen, G F Smoorenburg.
Abstract
The present study addresses the effect of cochlear implantation on the voice fundamental frequency at which 20 post-lingually deafened Dutch subjects utter speech materials. All subjects received the Nucleus 22 cochlear implant (3 WSP and 17 MSP processors). Speech recordings were made pre-implantation and three and twelve months post-implantation with the implant switched on and off. The fundamental frequency (f0) was sampled while reading a text. The pre-implantation results show that in some subjects, f0 was too high compared with the range in f0 of normally-hearing subjects. Post-implantation, with the implant switched on, we found that the abnormally high f0 values pre-implantation changed toward the normative values. In addition, post-implantation we found that the range over which f0 varied within a subject while reading the text, the f0 sway, decreased for most subjects who, pre-implantation, had their f0 sway outside the normative ranges, the normative range being defined as the interval between the mean plus/minus one standard deviation of the f0 sway found for normally-hearing subjects. Voice fundamental frequency of post-lingually deafened adults is characterized by large interindividual variability in the pre-implantation f0 values. This large interindividual variability is found also in the effect of cochlear implantation on f0.Mesh:
Year: 1998 PMID: 9723768 DOI: 10.3109/00206099809072976
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Audiology ISSN: 0020-6091