Optimized speech understanding with the continuous interleaved sampling speech coding strategy in patients with cochlear implants: effect of variations in stimulation rate and number of channels.

  • J Kiefer
  • C von Ilberg
  • V Rupprecht
  • J Hubner-Egner
  • Rainald Knecht

Related Research units

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of systematic variations in stimulation rate and number of channels on speech understanding in 13 patients with cochlear implants who used the continuous interleaved sampling speech coding strategy. Reducing the stimulation rate from 1,515 to 1,730 pulses per second per channel to 600 pulses per second per channel resulted in decreased overall performance; the understanding of monosyllables and consonants was more affected than the understanding of vowels. Reducing the number of active channels below 7 or 8 channels decreased speech understanding; the identification of vowels and monosyllables was most affected. We conclude that vowel recognition with the continuous interleaved sampling strategy relies on spectral cues more than on temporal cues, increasing with the number of active channels, whereas consonant recognition is more dependent on temporal cues and stimulation rate.

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number11
ISSN0003-4894
Publication statusPublished - 2000
pubmed 11089991