Publications by authors named "John J Galvin"

Objective: Single-sided deaf (SSD) cochlear implant (CI) patients often have difficulty with spatial perception, which may be partly due to limited fusion of acoustic and electric hearing. In the present study, we investigated binaural fusion in SSD CI patients.

Methods: Eight adult SSD CI patients participated in the study.

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The ability to segregate speech streams in challenging listening environments, often referred to as the "cocktail party effect," is critical for children learning effective communication, especially in noisy classroom settings. This developmental process, influenced by factors such as hearing sensitivity, cognitive abilities, and acoustic cues, has not been thoroughly examined in relation to hearing at frequencies above 8 kHz, to which children are exquisitely more sensitive than adults. This represents a critical gap, as emerging studies reveal the significant detrimental effects of filtering out this information.

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Objectives: Electrocochleography (ECOG) is a composite objective measure of the cochlea and the cochlear nerve responses. The objectives of this study were to investigate the evolution of ECOG after cochlear implantation and compare them with audiometric thresholds over a 12-month period.

Methods: A prospective monocentric study was conducted in Advanced Bionics cochlear implant recipients.

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Objectives: Speech perception develops during childhood, matures in early adulthood, and declines in old age. Everyday listening environments often contain competing sounds that may interfere with the perception of the signal of interest. With competing speech, listeners often experience informational masking, where the intelligibility and acoustic characteristics (e.

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Article Synopsis
  • English-speaking cochlear implant users rely on talker sex cues for speech segregation but struggle with spatial cues.
  • Mandarin-speaking cochlear implant users, however, show a stronger ability to utilize spatial cues, especially when using both hearing aids and cochlear implants (bimodal listening).
  • The study highlights the differences in speech recognition abilities between English and Mandarin CI users, particularly regarding their use of tonal language cues.
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Links between perception and production of emotional prosody by children with cochlear implants (CIs) have not been extensively explored. In this study, production and perception of emotional prosody were measured in 20 prelingually deaf school-age children with CIs. All were implanted by the age of 3, and most by 18 months.

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Treating pathologies of the inner ear is a major challenge. To date, a wide range of procedures exists for administering therapeutic agents to the inner ear, with varying degrees of success. The key is to deliver therapeutics in a way that is minimally invasive, effective, long-lasting, and without adverse effects on vestibular and cochlear function.

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  • Elderly adults have more difficulty understanding speech due to age-related issues with frequency perception, especially in the basal region of the cochlea.
  • In a study comparing older adults (61-74 years) to younger adults (22-28 years), it was found that older adults had significantly poorer frequency detection thresholds, particularly in the basal cochlear region.
  • The results showed a strong link between frequency perception deficits and poorer performance on tasks testing spectro-temporal pattern perception, suggesting these issues may impact speech understanding despite generally normal hearing thresholds in older adults.
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Speech recognition thresholds were measured as a function of the relative level between two speech maskers that differed in perceptual similarity from the target. Results showed that recognition thresholds were driven by the relative level between the target and perceptually similar masker when the perceptually similar masker was softer, and by the relative level between the target and both maskers when the perceptually similar masker was louder. This suggests that effectiveness of a two-talker masker is primarily determined by the masker stream that is most perceptually similar to the target, but also by the relative levels between the two maskers.

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Hearing loss in the extended high-frequency (EHF) range (>8 kHz) is widespread among young normal-hearing adults and could have perceptual consequences such as difficulty understanding speech in noise. However, it is unclear how EHF hearing loss might affect basic psychoacoustic processes. The hypothesis that EHF hearing loss is associated with poorer auditory resolution in the standard frequencies was tested.

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  • In-person auditory rehabilitation for French cochlear implant (CI) users is often inconvenient and time-consuming, leading to the development of the home training software "French AngelSound™."
  • A pilot study evaluated this software with 15 CI recipients, focusing on phoneme recognition in quiet and sentence recognition in noise, with diverse testing methods for different CI user types.
  • Results showed significant improvements in vowel and consonant recognition after just one month of phonemic contrast training, and participants largely retained these benefits after a follow-up period.
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Bimodal cochlear implant (CI) listeners have difficulty utilizing spatial cues to segregate competing speech, possibly due to tonotopic mismatch between the acoustic input frequency and electrode place of stimulation. The present study investigated the effects of tonotopic mismatch in the context of residual acoustic hearing in the non-CI ear or residual hearing in both ears. Speech recognition thresholds (SRTs) were measured with two co-located or spatially separated speech maskers in normal-hearing adults listening to acoustic simulations of CIs; low frequency acoustic information was available in the non-CI ear (bimodal listening) or in both ears.

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The auditory brainstem implant (ABI) can provide hearing sensation to individuals where the auditory nerve is damaged. However, patient outcomes with the ABI are typically much poorer than those for cochlear implant recipients. A major limitation to ABI outcomes is the number of implanted electrodes that can produce auditory responses to electric stimulation.

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  • Sonoporation using ultrasound and microbubbles enhances the delivery of therapeutic molecules across biological barriers, specifically targeting the inner ear via the round window membrane.
  • A study assessing the safety of this method in six ewes found no hearing loss or harmful heating effects after the procedure.
  • Metabolomic analysis showed no significant differences in perilymph samples between treated and control ears, indicating that sonoporation is safe for the inner ear.
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Damages to the ear are very diverse and can depend on the type of inherited metabolic diseases (IMD). Indeed, IMDs can affect all parts of the auditory system, from the outer ear to the central auditory process. We have identified 219 IMDs associated with various types of ear involvement which we classified into five groups according to the lesion site of the auditory system: congenital external ear abnormalities, acquired external ear abnormalities, middle ear involvement, inner ear or retrocochlear involvement, and unspecified hearing loss.

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Spatial cues can facilitate segregation of target speech from maskers. However, in clinical practice, masked speech understanding is most often evaluated using co-located speech and maskers (i.e.

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In the clinical fitting of cochlear implants (CIs), the lowest input acoustic frequency is typically much lower than the characteristic frequency associated with the most apical electrode position, due to the limited electrode insertion depth. For bilateral CI users, electrode positions may differ across ears. However, the same acoustic-to-electrode frequency allocation table (FAT) is typically assigned to both ears.

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Compared to normal-hearing (NH) listeners, cochlear implant (CI) listeners have greater difficulty segregating competing speech. Neurophysiological studies have largely investigated the neural foundations for CI listeners' speech recognition in quiet, mainly using the P300 component of event-related potentials (ERPs). P300 is closely related to cognitive processes involving auditory discrimination, selective attention, and working memory.

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The relative benefit of ipsilateral, contralateral, and bilateral repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for tinnitus treatment remains unclear, especially for patients with lateralized tinnitus. In this study, we compared outcomes after 10 sessions of 1-Hz rTMS at 110% of resting motor threshold over a two-week period. In total, 104 right-handed patients with lateralized subjective tinnitus were randomly divided into four groups according to rTMS treatment: Left (n = 29), Right (n = 23), Bilateral (n = 30), and Sham stimulation (n = 22).

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  • This study examines how cochlear implants (CIs) and acoustic hearing in the nonimplanted ear affect the ability to segregate competing speech using talker sex and spatial cues.
  • It involved 32 participants (16 normal-hearing and 16 unilateral CI users), testing their speech recognition in different scenarios with male and female talkers.
  • Results showed that normal-hearing individuals performed significantly better in separating competing speech compared to CI users, particularly benefiting more from a combination of talker sex and spatial cues.
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Children with normal hearing (CNH) have greater difficulty segregating competing speech than do adults with normal hearing (ANH). Children with cochlear implants (CCI) have greater difficulty segregating competing speech than do CNH. In the present study, speech reception thresholds (SRTs) in competing speech were measured in Chinese Mandarin-speaking ANH, CNH, and CCIs.

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In competing speech, recognition of target speech may be limited by the number and characteristics of maskers, which produce energetic, envelope, and/or informational masking. In this study, speech recognition thresholds (SRTs) were measured with one, two, or four maskers. The target and masker sex was the same or different, and SRTs were measured with time-forward or time-reversed maskers.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cochlear implant (CI) users struggle more than normal-hearing (NH) listeners when it comes to identifying the sex of a speaker and understanding sounds from different directions.
  • The study tested how well NH, bilateral CI, and bimodal CI listeners could recognize sentences amid competing sounds that were either placed together or apart, focusing on whether the competing voices were the same or different genders.
  • While NH listeners benefited significantly from recognizing the gender and location of the competing voices, CI users only saw some improvement when they could tell the gender of the sound, but not when it came to distinguishing where the sounds were coming from.
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Two notes sounded sequentially elicit melodic intervals and contours that form the basis of melody. Many previous studies have characterized pitch perception in cochlear implant (CI) users to be poor which may be due to the limited spectro-temporal resolution and/or spectral warping with electric hearing compared to acoustic hearing (AH). Poor pitch perception in CIs has been shown to distort melodic interval perception.

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Many tinnitus patients report difficulties understanding speech in noise or competing talkers, despite having "normal" hearing in terms of audiometric thresholds. The interference caused by tinnitus is more likely central in origin. Release from informational masking (more central in origin) produced by competing speech may further illuminate central interference due to tinnitus.

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