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Speech recognition with amplitude and frequency modulations: Implications for cochlear implant design Fan-Gang Zeng Kaibao Nie Ginger Stickney Ying-Yee Kong Ashish Bhargave Hongbin Chen Michael Vongphoe Janice Chang What’re AM and FM? What are their perceptual roles? Where to find it? Implications?
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What is fine structure? Rosen’s definition: Hilbert’s definition:
Envelope (5-50 Hz) Periodicity ( Hz) Fine structure (500-10,000 Hz) Hilbert’s definition: Temporal envelope Fine structure Original AM Fine Structure FM
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Little math Flanagan (1980) “Parametric coding of speech spectra” .
Discard absolute phase: Discard relative phase (i.e., frequency modulation): . .
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Zeng, Nie, Stickney et al. PNAS (2005)
Implementation Combo of Dudley’s vocoder and Flanagan’s phase vocoder Zeng, Nie, Stickney et al. PNAS (2005)
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Spectra: What does FM encode?
Zeng, Nie, Stickney et al. PNAS (2005)
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Sentence, speaker, and tone recognition
Combo: Target: Masker: Zeng, Nie, Stickney et al. PNAS (2005)
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Comparison with previous studies
Shannon et al. 1995 Dorman et al. 1997 Zeng et al. 2005 Zeng, Nie, Stickney et al. PNAS (2005)
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Spectral resolution and noise type
30-dB SRT Zeng, Nie, Stickney et al. PNAS (2005)
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Speech recognition in combined hearing
HA+CI CI HA 10-dB SRT Kong, Stickney, and Zeng JASA (2005)
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FM detection in CIs: Results
Frequency Time Chen and Zeng JASA (2004)
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Summary Using FM to improve auditory performance:
Speech cues are not redundant: FM complements AM in speech perception FM is important for speech recognition with competing voice as maskers FM is important for music and tonal language perception FM is a slow version of fine structure that can be perceived and used to improve cochlear implant performance
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Acknowledgements NIH - NIDCD Chinese NSF Advanced Bionics Corp
Cochlear Corp Medel Peter Assmann Ann Bradlow Keli Cao and CG Wei Larry Feth Ruth Litovsky Jones Ackland
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