Galvin John J, Fu Qian-Jie, Nogaki Geraldine
Department of Auditory Implants and Perception, House Ear Institute, Los Angeles, California 90057, USA.
Ear Hear. 2007 Jun;28(3):302-19. doi: 10.1097/01.aud.0000261689.35445.20.
While the cochlear implant provides many deaf patients with good speech understanding in quiet, music perception and appreciation with the cochlear implant remains a major challenge for most cochlear implant users. The present study investigated whether a closed-set melodic contour identification (MCI) task could be used to quantify cochlear implant users' ability to recognize musical melodies and whether MCI performance could be improved with moderate auditory training. The present study also compared MCI performance with familiar melody identification (FMI) performance, with and without MCI training.
For the MCI task, test stimuli were melodic contours composed of 5 notes of equal duration whose frequencies corresponded to musical intervals. The interval between successive notes in each contour was varied between 1 and 5 semitones; the "root note" of the contours was also varied (A3, A4, and A5). Nine distinct musical patterns were generated for each interval and root note condition, resulting in a total of 135 musical contours. The identification of these melodic contours was measured in 11 cochlear implant users. FMI was also evaluated in the same subjects; recognition of 12 familiar melodies was tested with and without rhythm cues. MCI was also trained in 6 subjects, using custom software and melodic contours presented in a different frequency range from that used for testing.
Results showed that MCI recognition performance was highly variable among cochlear implant users, ranging from 14% to 91% correct. For most subjects, MCI performance improved as the number of semitones between successive notes was increased; performance was slightly lower for the A3 root note condition. Mean FMI performance was 58% correct when rhythm cues were preserved and 29% correct when rhythm cues were removed. Statistical analyses revealed no significant correlation between MCI performance and FMI performance (with or without rhythmic cues). However, MCI performance was significantly correlated with vowel recognition performance; FMI performance was not correlated with cochlear implant subjects' phoneme recognition performance. Preliminary results also showed that the MCI training improved all subjects' MCI performance; the improved MCI performance also generalized to improved FMI performance.
Preliminary data indicate that the closed-set MCI task is a viable approach toward quantifying an important component of cochlear implant users' music perception. The improvement in MCI performance and generalization to FMI performance with training suggests that MCI training may be useful for improving cochlear implant users' music perception and appreciation; such training may be necessary to properly evaluate patient performance, as acute measures may underestimate the amount of musical information transmitted by the cochlear implant device and received by cochlear implant listeners.
虽然人工耳蜗能让许多聋人患者在安静环境中较好地理解言语,但对大多数人工耳蜗使用者而言,通过人工耳蜗进行音乐感知和欣赏仍是一项重大挑战。本研究调查了封闭集旋律轮廓识别(MCI)任务是否可用于量化人工耳蜗使用者识别音乐旋律的能力,以及适度的听觉训练是否能提高MCI表现。本研究还比较了有或没有MCI训练时MCI表现与熟悉旋律识别(FMI)表现。
对于MCI任务,测试刺激是由5个等时长音符组成的旋律轮廓,其频率对应音乐音程。每个轮廓中连续音符之间的音程在1至5个半音之间变化;轮廓的“根音”也有所不同(A3、A4和A5)。针对每个音程和根音条件生成9种不同的音乐模式,总共产生135个音乐轮廓。在11名人工耳蜗使用者中测量对这些旋律轮廓的识别。同样对这些受试者进行FMI评估;在有和没有节奏提示的情况下测试对12首熟悉旋律的识别。还对6名受试者进行MCI训练,使用定制软件以及在与测试所用不同频率范围内呈现的旋律轮廓。
结果显示,人工耳蜗使用者的MCI识别表现差异很大,正确识别率从14%到91%不等。对大多数受试者而言,随着连续音符之间半音数量的增加,MCI表现有所提高;A3根音条件下的表现略低。保留节奏提示时,FMI平均正确表现为58%,去除节奏提示时为29%。统计分析显示MCI表现与FMI表现(有或没有节奏提示)之间无显著相关性。然而,MCI表现与元音识别表现显著相关;FMI表现与人工耳蜗受试者的音素识别表现无关。初步结果还表明,MCI训练提高了所有受试者的MCI表现;MCI表现的提高也推广到了FMI表现的提高。
初步数据表明,封闭集MCI任务是量化人工耳蜗使用者音乐感知一个重要组成部分的可行方法。MCI表现的提高以及训练后推广到FMI表现表明,MCI训练可能有助于提高人工耳蜗使用者的音乐感知和欣赏能力;这种训练对于正确评估患者表现可能是必要的,因为即时测量可能低估了人工耳蜗设备传输并被人工耳蜗聆听者接收的音乐信息量。