Impact of Auditory-Motor Musical Training on Melodic Pattern Recognition in Cochlear Implant Users.

TitleImpact of Auditory-Motor Musical Training on Melodic Pattern Recognition in Cochlear Implant Users.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuthorsChari DA, Barrett KC, Patel AD, Colgrove TR, Jiradejvong P, Jacobs LY, Limb CJ
JournalOtol Neurotol
Volume41
Issue4
Paginatione422-e431
Date Published2020 Apr
ISSN1537-4505
KeywordsAdult, Auditory Perception, Cochlear Implantation, Cochlear Implants, Humans, Music, Pitch Perception, Prospective Studies, Speech Perception
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Cochlear implant (CI) users struggle with tasks of pitch-based prosody perception. Pitch pattern recognition is vital for both music comprehension and understanding the prosody of speech, which signals emotion and intent. Research in normal-hearing individuals shows that auditory-motor training, in which participants produce the auditory pattern they are learning, is more effective than passive auditory training. We investigated whether auditory-motor training of CI users improves complex sound perception, such as vocal emotion recognition and pitch pattern recognition, compared with purely auditory training.

STUDY DESIGN: Prospective cohort study.

SETTING: Tertiary academic center.

PATIENTS: Fifteen postlingually deafened adults with CIs.

INTERVENTION(S): Participants were divided into 3 one-month training groups: auditory-motor (intervention), auditory-only (active control), and no training (control). Auditory-motor training was conducted with the "Contours" software program and auditory-only training was completed with the "AngelSound" software program.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Pre and posttest examinations included tests of speech perception (consonant-nucleus-consonant, hearing-in-noise test sentence recognition), speech prosody perception, pitch discrimination, and melodic contour identification.

RESULTS: Participants in the auditory-motor training group performed better than those in the auditory-only and no-training (p < 0.05) for the melodic contour identification task. No significant training effect was noted on tasks of speech perception, speech prosody perception, or pitch discrimination.

CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that short-term auditory-motor music training of CI users impacts pitch pattern recognition. This study offers approaches for enriching the world of complex sound in the CI user.

DOI10.1097/MAO.0000000000002525
Alternate JournalOtol Neurotol
PubMed ID32176126