< Back to previous page

Project

DUAL-PRO. Dual electric-acoustic speech processor with linguistic assessment tools for deaf individuals with residual low frequency hearing. (DUAL-PRO))

To date, individuals with sensori-neural hearing loss may benefit from either acoustic stimulation (classical hearing aids) or electric stimulation (cochlear implants). Classical hearing aids are best suited for moderate and severe hearing losses and cochlear implants for profound losses. Cochlear implants enable profoundly deaf patients to reach high levels of speech intelligibility, but they are inadequate for the perception of music. The reason for this is that implants are conceived to code for the mid and high frequencies of sound ("spectral coding") since speech information is mainly contained in these frequencies. Implants are not performing well in the coding of low frequencies ("temporal coding"). These frequencies contain mainly information related to tonality, musicality, timbre, etc. Hearing aids perform much better in the temporal coding of low frequencies. Since most profoundly deaf persons have profound losses in the mid and high frequencies while they often have residual hearing in the low frequencies, the combination of the spectral coding of a cochlear implant with the temporal coding of a hearing aid, seems promising in improving the auditory performance of implant-wearers. In addition, temporal information seems of specific importance for the linguistic development in young children and it is anticipated that improving the low frequency perception may significantly enhance their linguistic capacities, thus decreasing their handicap and increasing the probability of mainstream integration. Main objectives of the proposed project: (i) to optimise deaf patients' hearing experience by developing a new hearing device which combines both types of stimulation in the same ear; (ii) to develop a test battery for prosody reception, i.e. the perception of language rhythm and melody; and (iii) to use this new prosody test battery as a quality measure for the current generation of cochlear implants and classical hearing aids, as well as for the newly developed hybrid electric-acoustic prototype.
Date:1 Jul 2008 →  30 Jun 2010
Keywords:HEARING MECHANISM, SPEECH PROCESSOR, HEARING LOSS
Disciplines:Otorhinolaryngology, Speech, language and hearing sciences
Project type:Collaboration project