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Fine Tuning For Hearing Impaired

POSTED: 4:51 pm MDT July 1, 2009
UPDATED: 8:09 pm MDT July 1, 2009

BACKGROUND: A cochlear implant is a surgically implanted electronic device that provides a sense of sound to a person who is deaf or severely hard of hearing. Unlike hearing aids, the implant doesn't amplify sound, but works by directly stimulating any functioning auditory nerves inside the cochlea with an electric field.

The implant consists of an external portion that sits behind the ear and a second part that's surgically placed under the skin in the side of the head.

An implant has the following parts:
  • A microphone, which picks up sound from the environment
  • A speech processor, which selects and arranges sounds picked up by the microphone
  • A transmitter and receiver, which receive signals from the speech processor and convert them into electric impulses
  • An electrode array, which is a group of electrodes that collects the impulses from the stimulator and sends them to different regions of the auditory nerve

    An implant does not restore normal hearing. Instead, it can give a deaf person a useful representation of sounds in the environment to help the person understand speech.

    FINE TUNING: The cochlear implant is a very helpful device for the hearing impaired, but the process of fine-tuning the device for the patient's optimal hearing could be more efficient and accurate, according to University of Florida researchers.

    An audiologist typically evaluates patients to fit the cochlear implant processor. The expert manipulates implant settings by asking the patient if the changes help him or her understand speech better.

    The process often takes multiple clinic visits and several months to complete.

    "This traditional approach for cochlear implant device tuning has several pitfalls," Alice Holmes, Ph.D., Professor of Audiology in the Department of Communicative Disorders at the University of Florida in Gainesville, said. "First, there are several million combinations of device parameters making it impossible to evaluate a patient's performance for every possible combination. This method also relies on the patient's subjective judgment, which is typically variable and inconsistent and may not reflect the best device settings for their speech recognition."

    UF investigators created the cochlear implant optimization software program. In a pilot study of the software, UF researchers found the new program resulted in improved performance in all outcomes measures, including speech perception and the ability to hear over background noise.

    Seventeen of the 20 cochlear implant recipients who participated in the research preferred to continue using the new optimized programming over traditional cochlear implant settings.

    The program, known as Clarujust, is the first standard analytical approach to tuning cochlear implants. The program tests the patient's hearing using actual speech sounds, not the tones used in the traditional tuning process. The software program quickly analyzes the patient's speech comprehension to determine the best implant setting for a particular patient.

    FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
    University of Florida
    Health Science Center
    Jill Pease
    (352) 273-5816
    jpease@phhp.ufl.edu
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