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Article

Amplitude Compression in Cochlear Implants Artificially Restricts the Perception of Temporal Asymmetry

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Pages 367-374 | Received 06 May 1997, Accepted 23 Mar 1998, Published online: 03 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

This paper presents a study in which five cochlear implantees were asked to discriminate the timbre of stimuli with temporally asymmetric envelopes. Stimuli were damped and ramped sinusoids presented acoustically. They were transformed by the speech processor of the implant and were presented through one electrode. All cochlear implantees could discriminate the damped and ramped sinusoids when the half-life was 4 ms, the carrier frequency was 400 Hz, and the period of the envelope was 50 ms. In a second experiment, timbre discrimination performance was measured as a function of half-life for two cochlear implantees. Both showed that timbre discrimination was possible over the range 1–24 ms. In normal-hearing listeners, the range is 1–64 ms and in cochlear implantees, stimulated directly without the speech processor, the range is 1–300 ms. At long half-lives, the decrease in discrimination performance observed with the speech processor appears to be due to the amplitude compression applied by the device. The present results suggest that it may be important to ensure that cochlear implants do not restrict temporal asymmetry unduly when applying compression to control level.

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