Limb Charles J, Mo Jonathan, Jiradejvong Patpong, Jiam Nicole T
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, California, USA.
Department of Computer and Information Science, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Laryngoscope. 2023 Apr;133(4):938-947. doi: 10.1002/lary.30324. Epub 2022 Jul 30.
To evaluate the impact of vocal boost manipulations on cochlear implant (CI) musical sound quality appraisals.
An anonymous, online study was distributed to 33 CI users. Participants listened to auditory tokens and assessed the musical quality of acoustic stimuli with vocal boosting and attenuation using a validated sound quality rating scale. Four versions of real-world musical stimuli were created: a version with +9 dB vocal boost, a version with -9 dB vocal attenuation, a composite stimulus containing a 1,000 Hz low-pass filter and white noise ("anchor"), and an unaltered version ("hidden reference"). Subjects listened to all four versions and provided ratings based on a 100-point scale that reflected the perceived sound quality difference of the music clip relative to the reference excerpt.
Vocal boost increased musical sound quality ratings relative to the reference clip (11.7; 95% CI, 1.62-21.8, p = 0.016) and vocal attenuation decreased musical sound quality ratings relative to the reference clip (28.5; 95% CI, 18.64-38.44, p < 0.001). When comparing the non-musical training group and musical training group, there was a significant difference in musical sound quality rating scores for the vocal boost condition (21.2; 95% CI: 1.76-40.7, p = 0.028).
CI-mediated musical sound quality appraisals are impacted by vocal boost and attenuation. Musically trained CI users to report greater musical sound quality enhancement with a vocal boost with respect to CI users with no musical training background. Implementation of front-end vocal boost manipulations in music may improve sound quality and music appreciation among CI users.
2 (Individual cohort study) Laryngoscope, 133:938-947, 2023.
评估声音增强操作对人工耳蜗(CI)音乐音质评估的影响。
一项匿名在线研究面向33名CI使用者展开。参与者聆听听觉样本,并使用经过验证的音质评分量表对具有声音增强和衰减的声学刺激的音乐质量进行评估。创建了四个版本的真实世界音乐刺激:一个具有+9 dB声音增强的版本、一个具有 -9 dB声音衰减的版本、一个包含1000 Hz低通滤波器和白噪声的复合刺激(“锚定”)以及一个未改变的版本(“隐藏参考”)。受试者聆听所有四个版本,并根据反映音乐片段相对于参考摘录的感知音质差异的100分制提供评分。
相对于参考片段,声音增强提高了音乐音质评分(11.7;95%置信区间,1.62 - 21.8,p = 0.016),声音衰减降低了相对于参考片段的音乐音质评分(28.5;95%置信区间,18.64 - 38.44,p < 0.001)。在比较非音乐训练组和音乐训练组时,声音增强条件下的音乐音质评分得分存在显著差异(21.2;95%置信区间:1.76 - 40.7,p = 0.028)。
CI介导的音乐音质评估受到声音增强和衰减的影响。与没有音乐训练背景的CI使用者相比,接受过音乐训练的CI使用者报告声音增强带来了更大的音乐音质提升。在音乐中实施前端声音增强操作可能会改善CI使用者的音质和音乐欣赏水平。
2(个体队列研究)《喉镜》,2023年,第133卷,第938 - 947页