Bilaterally Combined Electric and Acoustic Hearing in Mandarin-Speaking Listeners: The Population With Poor Residual Hearing
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Date
2018-01-16
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Authors
Tao, Duo-Duo
Liu, Ji-Sheng
Yang, Zhen-Dong
Wilson, Blake S.
Zhou, Ning
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Abstract
The hearing loss criterion for cochlear implant candidacy in mainland China is extremely stringent (bilateral severe to
profound hearing loss), resulting in few patients with substantial residual hearing in the nonimplanted ear. The main objective
of the current study was to examine the benefit of bimodal hearing in typical Mandarin-speaking implant users who have
poorer residual hearing in the nonimplanted ear relative to those used in the English-speaking studies. Seventeen Mandarinspeaking bimodal users with pure-tone averages of 80 dB HL participated in the study. Sentence recognition in quiet and in
noise as well as tone and word recognition in quiet were measured in monaural and bilateral conditions. There was no
significant bimodal effect for word and sentence recognition in quiet. Small bimodal effects were observed for sentence
recognition in noise (6%) and tone recognition (4%). The magnitude of both effects was correlated with unaided thresholds at
frequencies near voice fundamental frequencies (F0s). A weak correlation between the bimodal effect for word recognition
and unaided thresholds at frequencies higher than F0s was identified. These results were consistent with previous findings
that showed more robust bimodal benefits for speech recognition tasks that require higher spectral resolution than speech
recognition in quiet. The significant but small F0-related bimodal benefit was also consistent with the limited acoustic hearing
in the nonimplanted ear of the current subject sample, who are representative of the bimodal users in mainland China.
These results advocate for a more relaxed implant candidacy criterion to be used in mainland China.
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DOI
10.1177/2331216518757892