首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Frequency Mapping in Cochlear Implants
Frequency Mapping in Cochlear Implants

 

作者: Qian-Jie Fu,   Robert Shannon,  

 

期刊: Ear and Hearing  (OVID Available online 2002)
卷期: Volume 23, issue 4  

页码: 339-348

 

ISSN:0196-0202

 

年代: 2002

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

ObjectiveTo understand the short-term (“acute”) effects of parametric variations to the frequency-to-electrode mapping on phoneme identification by Nucleus-22 cochlear implant listeners.MethodsPhoneme recognition was measured in five Nucleus-22 cochlear implant listeners using custom four-channel continuous interleaved sampler (CIS) processors. For the four-channel processors, speech signals were band-pass filtered into four broad frequency bands. The temporal envelope in each band was extracted by half-wave rectification and low-pass filtering at 160 Hz. The extracted envelope was then transformed to electric currents by a power function with an exponent of 0.2. The resulting electric currents were delivered to four electrode pairs (18,22), (13,17), (8,12), (3,7). The effect of frequency-to-electrode mapping was investigated by systematically varying the parameters of band-pass filters while fixing the electrode locations. Experiment 1 measured phoneme recognition as a function of the slope of band-pass filters. The slope of band-pass filters varied from 48 dB/octave to 6 dB/octave; the corner frequencies of band-pass filters were not varied. Experiment 2 measured phoneme recognition as a function of the distribution of band-pass filters across a fixed overall frequency range. The frequency divisions of a fixed overall frequency range were systematically varied from a logarithmic to a linear distribution. Experiment 3 measured phoneme recognition as a function of the bandwidth of the band-pass filters. The bandwidth of each filter varied from 0.2 to 2 octaves; the center frequencies for each band were not varied. No practice or feedback was provided for subjects in all experiments.ResultsThe slope of the band-pass filters had little effect on both vowel and consonant recognition. A slight performance drop was observed for only the shallowest slope condition (6 dB/octave). In contrast, the distribution of the band-pass filters had a strong effect on vowel recognition but a weak effect on consonant recognition. Best performance was achieved when a logarithmic or near-logarithmic frequency distribution was used to divide the overall frequency range. The bandwidth of the band-pass filters had a moderate effect on both vowel and consonant recognition. Vowel scores dropped significantly when the bandwidth of filters was too broad, whereas consonant scores dropped significantly when a narrower bandwidth was used.ConclusionUnder “acute” testing conditions, phoneme recognition with a four-channel CIS strategy seems to be only mildly affected by the slope of the band-pass filters, but can be significantly affected by the distribution of filters as well as the bandwidth of the filters. Optimal or near-optimal performance can be achieved with a logarithmic frequency distribution. Vowels are more susceptible to broad bandwidths, whereas consonants are more susceptible to narrow bandwidths.

 

点击下载:  PDF (1003KB)



返 回