Abstract

Relatively little is known about cochlear implant (CI) users' ability to make use of static versus dynamic spectral cues in vowel perception tasks. The present study measured vowel identification in CI users and young normal hearing (YNH) listeners using naturally produced /dVd/ stimuli (deed, did, Dade, dead, dad, dud, and Dodd). Vowel identifcation was tested for (1) the unmodified syllables, (2) syllables modified to retain only 60 or 80 ms of the vowel center (center-only conditions), and (3) syllables modified to retain only 30 or 40 ms of the initial and final vowel transitions, with vowel duration neutralized (edges-only conditions). YNH listeners achieved high levels of performance for the unmodified stimuli (avg. 99.8%) and for the center-only stimuli (90.8%); their performance dropped to more moderate levels (68.1%) for the edges-only stimuli. CI users demonstrated moderate performance for the unmodified stimuli (avg. 72.0%) but demonstrated substantially poorer performance for both the center-only (41.1%) and edges-only stimuli (27.8%). Findings suggest that CI users (1) have difficulty identifying vowels in syllables when one or more cues are absent and (2) rely more strongly on quasi-static cues from the vowel center as compared to dynamic cues at the syllable edges.

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