Cochlear Implants

Matthew B. Winn, P. Nelson
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Abstract

Cochlear implants (CIs) are the most successful sensory implant in history, restoring the sensation of sound to thousands of persons who have severe to profound hearing loss. Implants do not recreate acoustic sound as most of us know it, but they instead convey a rough representation of the temporal envelope of signals. This sparse signal, derived from the envelopes of narrowband frequency filters, is sufficient for enabling speech understanding in quiet environments for those who lose hearing as adults and is enough for most children to develop spoken language skills. The variability between users is huge, however, and is only partially understood. CIs provide acoustic information that is sufficient for the recognition of some aspects of spoken language, especially information that can be conveyed by temporal patterns, such as syllable timing, consonant voicing, and manner of articulation. They are insufficient for conveying pitch cues and separating speech from noise. There is a great need for improving our understanding of functional outcomes of CI success beyond measuring percent correct for word and sentence recognitions. Moreover, greater understanding of the variability experienced by children, especially children and families from various social and cultural backgrounds, is of paramount importance. Future developments will no doubt expand the use of this remarkable device.
耳蜗植入设备
人工耳蜗(CIs)是历史上最成功的感觉植入物,为成千上万患有严重到深度听力损失的人恢复了声音感觉。植入物并不像我们大多数人所知道的那样重现声音,而是传递信号的时间包络的粗略表示。这种来自窄带频率滤波器包络的稀疏信号,足以让那些成年失聪的人在安静的环境中理解语言,也足以让大多数儿童发展口语技能。然而,用户之间的差异是巨大的,而且只是部分地被理解。ci提供的声学信息足以识别口语的某些方面,特别是可以通过时间模式传达的信息,如音节时间、辅音发音和发音方式。它们不足以传达音高线索和区分语音与噪音。除了测量单词和句子识别的正确率之外,我们还非常需要提高我们对CI成功的功能结果的理解。此外,更深入地了解儿童,特别是来自不同社会和文化背景的儿童和家庭所经历的差异是至关重要的。毫无疑问,未来的发展将扩大这一非凡设备的使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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