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PERCEPTION OF MUSIC BY PATIENTS WITH COCHLEAR IMPLANTS Jaan Ross (Tartu and Tallinn) Inna V. Koroleva and Jelena A. Ogorodnikova (St. Petersburg)
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20062 Cochlear implantation (1) Cochlear implantation is one of the most perspective directions in the rehabilitation of patients with significant hearing losses Cochlear implant is a surgically implantable device that provides hearing sensation to individuals with severe-to-profound hearing loss who do not benefit from hearing aids People with hearing losses in such range have absent or malfunctioning sensory cells in the cochlea
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20063 Cochlear implantation (2) In a normal ear, sound energy is converted to mechanical energy by the middle ear, which is then converted to mechanical fluid motion in the cochlea. Within the cochlea, the sensory cells (the inner and outer hair cells) are sensitive transducers that convert that mechanical fluid motion into electrical impulses in the auditory nerve.
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20064 Cochlear implantation (3) Cochlear implants are designed to substitute for the function of the middle ear, cochlear mechanical motion, and sensory cells, transforming sound energy into electrical energy that will initiate impulses in the auditory nerve consist of both Implant systems consist of both internal and external components
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20065 Cochlear implantation (4) The external components (over or next to the ear) include (1) a microphone, which converts sound into an electrical signal, (2) a speech processor, which manipulates and converts the signal into a special code and (3) a transmitter, which sends the coded electrical signal to the internal components The surgically implanted components include (A) a receiver, which decodes the signal from the speech processor, and (B) an electrode array, which stimulates the cochlea with electrical current The systems are powered by batteries located in the speech processor
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20066 Rehabilitation (1) Rehabilitation is the very important post-surgical stage of cochlear implantation It is a complex and long process which essentially depends on individual characteristics of the patient (auditory experience, general abilities and the absence of mental defects) It is accepted to distinguish between the two groups of patients with cochlear implants : pre-lingual - the hearing loss occurred before the patient has learned to speak (in general, before the second year of life) and post-lingual - when the hearing loss occurred in the age of four years or later (after the patient has learned to speak)
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20067 Rehabilitation (2) The main task of rehabilitation : for post-lingual patients - the regeneration of the ability to perceive and to understand spoken language (the forming of connections between the distorted auditory information and previous internal patterns of speech and other sounds) for pre-lingual patients - the development of the foundations of auditory perception from the beginning (includes the basic elementary operations - detection and discrimination of sounds) and building up the whole system of spoken language So for all listeners with cochlea implants – a primary rehabilitation problem is the creation or correction of «new» auditory patterns
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20068 Rehabilitation and music cochlear implants have been designed primarily to enhance speech perception many implant recipients anticipate enjoying music following the implantation in fact, up to 38 per cent of implant recipients report they do not enjoy listening to music with their device up to 86 per cent of post-lingual recipients report lower scores of listening habits after implantation musically oriented rehabilitation programs should be used in order to narrow the gap between pre-surgical expectancies of the implant recipients and their post-surgical experiences
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 20069 Hypothesis pitch has been reported to be recognized with more difficulty than rhythm or timbre by implant recipients (because frequency encoding is robust with an implant), therefore temporal and timbral aspects of music are expected to be perceived better than pitch
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200610 Method about 150 cochlear implant receivers in St. Petersburg area by 2005 they are interviewed in order to study their post-surgical adaptation to listening music interviews are conducted at the Institute of Otolaryngology in St. Petersburg as a part of general rehabilitation program selected interviews are videotaped
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200611 Training system for rehabilitation program The system has been developed in collaboration between the Pavlov Institute of Physiology, and the Institute of Otolaryngology in St. Petersburg where the surgery and post- surgical rehabilitation of the patients is carried out In practice, the system consists of the laptop, two loudspeakers, and a console for patients under school age The software for the computerized training and rehabilitation system includes standardized available components as well as original modules developed for the tasks to be fulfilled in the framework of the project
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200612 Interview Did you listen to speech, music, or noise? If this was music, was it singing or playing an instrument? If this was singing, was there just one performer or many of them? Were the singers male or female? If this was playing an instrument, was there just one instrument or many? String, wind, or percussion? Was this music joyful or sad? Fast or slow? Pleasant or not? Simple or complicated? Did this music sound in high, medium or low register?
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200613 Choice of music for the interview Four excerpts from world music, with different sound characteristics: Japanese bamboo flute shakuhachi: one voice, long notes, timing plays little role Saami jojk (Mari Boine): female singing, one voice, heterogeneous rhythm Lithuanian sutartine: polyphonic female singing (facilitates harmonic dissonances), repetitive rhythm Tuvan overtone singing (xöömij): a low fundamental of special timbre, with higher overtones made audible one-by-one
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200614 Long-term spectra of (1) Japanese bamboo flute shakuhachi (top left), (2) Saami jojk (top right), (3) Lithuanian dissonant polyphony (bottom left), and (4) Tuvan overtone singing (bottom right)
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200615 Excerpts from an interview (1) - a post-lingual patient - has used the implant for 4 years - recognizes Lithuanian polyphonic and Tuvan overtone singing - confuses shakuhachi sound with Saami jojk - claims to prefer the jojk to other excerpts
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200616 Excerpts from an interview (2) a post-lingual patient has used the implant for a couple of weeks describes Tuvan overtone singing as sound of a Jewish harp describes shakuhachi sound as singing confuses Saami jojk with Lithuanian polyphony noticeable progress during the interview admits using extramusical features (sound volume) to solve the task
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200617 Interview results for 10 CI-recipients (age 10 to 55 years, post-surgical experience from 2 weeks to 4 years) flutejojksutartinexöömij music1010107 singing210106 female singing1772 joyful0081 fast0080 pleasant8880 low pitch2318 medium pitch3114 high pitch2061
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200618 Listening preference score for ten CI- recipients
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200619 General conclusion Post-lingual patients with cochlear implants are strongly motivated to attend music even when its perceived acoustical characteristics only remotely resemble the patterns they are familiar with from the period preceding their hearing loss. This may be explained by an ecologically important function music fulfills in people’s everyday life.
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200620 A related study of intonation statements and questions may be distinguished from each other on the basis of intonation statements tend to have falling intonation while questions tend to have rising intonation
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Paper presented at the Institut für Musikwissenschaft, Universität Graz, 14 March 200621 Thanks to Elvira I. Stoljarova of the Pavlov Institute of Physiology, St. Petersburg, for video recording of the interviews Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin for providing me with a three-month Mellon scholarship
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