The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant Users

Sequential stream segregation by cochlear implant (CI) listeners was investigated using a temporal delay detection task composed of a sequence of regularly presented bursts of pulses on a single electrode (B) interleaved with an irregular sequence (A) presented on a different electrode. In half of t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Andreu Paredes-Gallardo, Sara M. K. Madsen, Torsten Dau, Jeremy Marozeau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-01-01
Series:Trends in Hearing
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216517750262
id doaj-47ac673a250941648eb5a922d0c040f9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-47ac673a250941648eb5a922d0c040f92020-11-25T03:19:58ZengSAGE PublishingTrends in Hearing2331-21652018-01-012210.1177/2331216517750262The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant UsersAndreu Paredes-GallardoSara M. K. MadsenTorsten DauJeremy MarozeauSequential stream segregation by cochlear implant (CI) listeners was investigated using a temporal delay detection task composed of a sequence of regularly presented bursts of pulses on a single electrode (B) interleaved with an irregular sequence (A) presented on a different electrode. In half of the trials, a delay was added to the last burst of the regular B sequence, and the listeners were asked to detect this delay. As a jitter was added to the period between consecutive A bursts, time judgments between the A and B sequences provided an unreliable cue to perform the task. Thus, the segregation of the A and B sequences should improve performance. In Experiment 1, the electrode separation and the sequence duration were varied to clarify whether place cues help CI listeners to voluntarily segregate sounds and whether a two-stream percept needs time to build up. Results suggested that place cues can facilitate the segregation of sequential sounds if enough time is provided to build up a two-stream percept. In Experiment 2, the duration of the sequence was fixed, and only the electrode separation was varied to estimate the fission boundary. Most listeners were able to segregate the sounds for separations of three or more electrodes, and some listeners could segregate sounds coming from adjacent electrodes.https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216517750262
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andreu Paredes-Gallardo
Sara M. K. Madsen
Torsten Dau
Jeremy Marozeau
spellingShingle Andreu Paredes-Gallardo
Sara M. K. Madsen
Torsten Dau
Jeremy Marozeau
The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant Users
Trends in Hearing
author_facet Andreu Paredes-Gallardo
Sara M. K. Madsen
Torsten Dau
Jeremy Marozeau
author_sort Andreu Paredes-Gallardo
title The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant Users
title_short The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant Users
title_full The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant Users
title_fullStr The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant Users
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Place Cues in Voluntary Stream Segregation for Cochlear Implant Users
title_sort role of place cues in voluntary stream segregation for cochlear implant users
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Trends in Hearing
issn 2331-2165
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Sequential stream segregation by cochlear implant (CI) listeners was investigated using a temporal delay detection task composed of a sequence of regularly presented bursts of pulses on a single electrode (B) interleaved with an irregular sequence (A) presented on a different electrode. In half of the trials, a delay was added to the last burst of the regular B sequence, and the listeners were asked to detect this delay. As a jitter was added to the period between consecutive A bursts, time judgments between the A and B sequences provided an unreliable cue to perform the task. Thus, the segregation of the A and B sequences should improve performance. In Experiment 1, the electrode separation and the sequence duration were varied to clarify whether place cues help CI listeners to voluntarily segregate sounds and whether a two-stream percept needs time to build up. Results suggested that place cues can facilitate the segregation of sequential sounds if enough time is provided to build up a two-stream percept. In Experiment 2, the duration of the sequence was fixed, and only the electrode separation was varied to estimate the fission boundary. Most listeners were able to segregate the sounds for separations of three or more electrodes, and some listeners could segregate sounds coming from adjacent electrodes.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2331216517750262
work_keys_str_mv AT andreuparedesgallardo theroleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
AT saramkmadsen theroleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
AT torstendau theroleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
AT jeremymarozeau theroleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
AT andreuparedesgallardo roleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
AT saramkmadsen roleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
AT torstendau roleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
AT jeremymarozeau roleofplacecuesinvoluntarystreamsegregationforcochlearimplantusers
_version_ 1724619909847056384