Factors Affecting Open-Set Word Recognition in Adults With Cochlear Implants
Washington University in St. Louis · Advanced Pharma
Abstract
Participants were 114 postlingually deaf adults with either the Cochlear or Advanced Bionics CI systems. Biographic/audiologic information, aided sentence-recognition scores, a high resolution temporal bone CT scan and cognitive measures were obtained before implantation. Monosyllabic word recognition scores were obtained during numerous test intervals from 2 weeks to 2 years after initial activation of the CI. Electrode position within the cochlea was determined by three-dimensional reconstruction of pre- and postimplant CT scans. Participants’ word scores over 2 years were fit with a logistic curve to predict word score as a function of time and to highlight 4-word recognition metrics (CNC initial score, CNC final score, rise time to 90% of CNC final score, and CNC difference score).
Participants were divided into six outcome groups based on the percentile ranking of their CNC final score, that is, participants in the bottom 10% were in group 1; those in the top 10% were in group 6. Across outcome groups, significant relationships from low to high performance were identified. Biographic/audiologic factors of age at implantation, duration of hearing loss, duration of hearing aid use, and duration of severe-to-profound hearing loss were significantly and inversely related to performance as were frequency modulated tone, sound-field threshold levels obtained with the CI. That is, the higher-performing outcome groups were younger in age at the time of implantation, had shorter duration of severe-to-profound hearing loss, and had lower CI sound-field threshold levels. Significant inverse relationships across outcome groups were also observed for electrode position, specifically the percentage of electrodes in scala vestibuli as opposed to scala tympani and depth of insertion of the electrode array. In addition, positioning of electrode arrays closer to the modiolar wall was positively correlated with outcome. Cognitive ability was significantly and positively related to outcome; however, age at implantation and cognition were highly correlated. After controlling for age, cognition was no longer a factor affecting outcomes.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.52
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
11- LKLaura K. HoldenCorresponding
Washington University in St. Louis
- CCCharles C. Finley
Washington University in St. Louis, Advanced Pharma
- JBJill B. Firszt
Washington University in St. Louis
- TATimothy A. HoldenCorresponding
Washington University in St. Louis
- CBChristine Brenner
Washington University in St. Louis
Topics & keywords
- Cochlear implant
- Audiology
- Medicine
- Word recognition
- Sentence
- Percentile
- Reading (process)
- Natural language processing
- Quality Education