Chatterjee Monita, Zion Danielle J, Deroche Mickael L, Burianek Brooke A, Limb Charles J, Goren Alison P, Kulkarni Aditya M, Christensen Julie A
Auditory Prostheses & Perception Lab., Boys Town National Research Hospital, 555 N 30th St, Omaha, NE 68131, USA.
Department of Hearing & Speech Sciences, University of Maryland, 0100 LeFrak Hall, College Park, MD 20742, USA.
Hear Res. 2015 Apr;322:151-62. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2014.10.003. Epub 2014 Oct 16.
Despite their remarkable success in bringing spoken language to hearing impaired listeners, the signal transmitted through cochlear implants (CIs) remains impoverished in spectro-temporal fine structure. As a consequence, pitch-dominant information such as voice emotion, is diminished. For young children, the ability to correctly identify the mood/intent of the speaker (which may not always be visible in their facial expression) is an important aspect of social and linguistic development. Previous work in the field has shown that children with cochlear implants (cCI) have significant deficits in voice emotion recognition relative to their normally hearing peers (cNH). Here, we report on voice emotion recognition by a cohort of 36 school-aged cCI. Additionally, we provide for the first time, a comparison of their performance to that of cNH and NH adults (aNH) listening to CI simulations of the same stimuli. We also provide comparisons to the performance of adult listeners with CIs (aCI), most of whom learned language primarily through normal acoustic hearing. Results indicate that, despite strong variability, on average, cCI perform similarly to their adult counterparts; that both groups' mean performance is similar to aNHs' performance with 8-channel noise-vocoded speech; that cNH achieve excellent scores in voice emotion recognition with full-spectrum speech, but on average, show significantly poorer scores than aNH with 8-channel noise-vocoded speech. A strong developmental effect was observed in the cNH with noise-vocoded speech in this task. These results point to the considerable benefit obtained by cochlear-implanted children from their devices, but also underscore the need for further research and development in this important and neglected area. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled
尽管人工耳蜗(CI)在帮助听力受损者听到口语方面取得了显著成功,但其传输的信号在频谱-时间精细结构方面仍然匮乏。因此,诸如语音情感等以音高为主的信息会减少。对于幼儿来说,正确识别说话者的情绪/意图(这在他们的面部表情中可能并不总是可见)是社交和语言发展的一个重要方面。该领域以前的研究表明,与听力正常的同龄人(cNH)相比,人工耳蜗植入儿童(cCI)在语音情感识别方面存在显著缺陷。在这里,我们报告了36名学龄期cCI儿童的语音情感识别情况。此外,我们首次将他们的表现与cNH儿童以及聆听相同刺激的人工耳蜗模拟声的正常听力成年人(aNH)的表现进行了比较。我们还将其表现与主要通过正常听觉学习语言的人工耳蜗成年聆听者(aCI)的表现进行了比较。结果表明,尽管存在很大差异,但平均而言,cCI儿童的表现与成年人工耳蜗聆听者相似;两组的平均表现与aNH聆听8通道噪声编码语音时的表现相似;cNH儿童在全频谱语音的语音情感识别中取得了优异成绩,但平均而言,其成绩明显低于聆听8通道噪声编码语音的aNH。在这项任务中,cNH儿童在噪声编码语音方面观察到了显著的发育效应。这些结果表明人工耳蜗植入儿童从其设备中获得了相当大的益处,但也强调了在这个重要且被忽视的领域进行进一步研究和开发的必要性。本文是名为<拉斯克奖>的特刊的一部分。