Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant

En Abstract Objective The aim of this study was to assess short-term auditory memory in children with cochlear implant and to assess the possible correlation of their language ages with their memory scores to consider memory training during rehabilitation program for cochlear-implanted patients. Pat...

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Main Authors: Shazly Mohamed, Abdel-Hamid Asmaa, Fawzy Aisha, Mahmoud Heba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-04-01
Series:The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/1012-5574.181084
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spelling doaj-003999adfcf940d68dff9f731287417e2021-04-02T13:04:51ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology1012-55742090-85392016-04-013229810410.4103/1012-5574.181084Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implantShazly Mohamed0Abdel-Hamid Asmaa1Fawzy Aisha2Mahmoud Heba3Department of ENT, Cairo UniversityDepartment of ENT, Phoniatric Unit, Phoniatrics Kasr Al Aini Hospital, Cairo UniversityDepartment of ENT, Phoniatric Unit, Phoniatrics Kasr Al Aini Hospital, Cairo UniversityDepartment of ENT, Phoniatric Unit, Phoniatrics Kasr Al Aini Hospital, Cairo UniversityEn Abstract Objective The aim of this study was to assess short-term auditory memory in children with cochlear implant and to assess the possible correlation of their language ages with their memory scores to consider memory training during rehabilitation program for cochlear-implanted patients. Patients and methods Sixty-one Egyptian children were included in this study. Thirty prelingual deaf children implanted with the nucleus multichannel cochlear implant were included. Their ages at the time of implantation ranged from 4 years to 4 years 11 months. All of the children had normal intellectual abilities. All cases were selected from Wadi El Neel Hospital where they received their aural-oral rehabilitation program for 1 year. A total of 31 normal children of matched sex and age were selected as a control group. A battery of auditory short-term memory assessments for Arabic-speaking children were applied to all children. An Arabic language test was also applied. Results A significant defect in short-term auditory memory in cochlear-implanted children as compared with controls was proven. A positive correlation between short-term auditory memory and their language ages was found. Conclusion The study revealed defective short-term auditory memory in cochlear-implanted children. This defect is more evident in cochlear-implanted children with poor language skills.http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/1012-5574.181084acquisitiondigit spanlanguagelanguage ageshort-term auditory memory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shazly Mohamed
Abdel-Hamid Asmaa
Fawzy Aisha
Mahmoud Heba
spellingShingle Shazly Mohamed
Abdel-Hamid Asmaa
Fawzy Aisha
Mahmoud Heba
Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant
The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
acquisition
digit span
language
language age
short-term auditory memory
author_facet Shazly Mohamed
Abdel-Hamid Asmaa
Fawzy Aisha
Mahmoud Heba
author_sort Shazly Mohamed
title Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant
title_short Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant
title_full Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant
title_fullStr Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant
title_full_unstemmed Auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant
title_sort auditory short-term memory in children with cochlear implant
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
issn 1012-5574
2090-8539
publishDate 2016-04-01
description En Abstract Objective The aim of this study was to assess short-term auditory memory in children with cochlear implant and to assess the possible correlation of their language ages with their memory scores to consider memory training during rehabilitation program for cochlear-implanted patients. Patients and methods Sixty-one Egyptian children were included in this study. Thirty prelingual deaf children implanted with the nucleus multichannel cochlear implant were included. Their ages at the time of implantation ranged from 4 years to 4 years 11 months. All of the children had normal intellectual abilities. All cases were selected from Wadi El Neel Hospital where they received their aural-oral rehabilitation program for 1 year. A total of 31 normal children of matched sex and age were selected as a control group. A battery of auditory short-term memory assessments for Arabic-speaking children were applied to all children. An Arabic language test was also applied. Results A significant defect in short-term auditory memory in cochlear-implanted children as compared with controls was proven. A positive correlation between short-term auditory memory and their language ages was found. Conclusion The study revealed defective short-term auditory memory in cochlear-implanted children. This defect is more evident in cochlear-implanted children with poor language skills.
topic acquisition
digit span
language
language age
short-term auditory memory
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/1012-5574.181084
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AT fawzyaisha auditoryshorttermmemoryinchildrenwithcochlearimplant
AT mahmoudheba auditoryshorttermmemoryinchildrenwithcochlearimplant
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