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Effect of experimentally introduced interaural frequency mismatch on sentence recognition in bilateral cochlear-implant listeners.

Miranda ClearyKristina DeRoy MilvaeNicole NguyenJoshua G W BernsteinMatthew J Goupell
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2023)
Bilateral cochlear-implant users experience interaural frequency mismatch because of asymmetries in array insertion and frequency-to-electrode assignment. To explore the acute perceptual consequences of such mismatch, sentence recognition in quiet was measured in nine bilateral cochlear-implant listeners as frequency allocations in the poorer ear were shifted by ±1.5, ±3 and ±4.5 mm using experimental programs. Shifts in frequency allocation >3 mm were found to reduce bilateral sentence scores below those for the better ear alone, suggesting that the poorer ear interfered with better-ear perception. This was not a result of fewer active channels; deactivating electrodes without frequency shifting had minimal effect.
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