Abstract

There are significant challenges to restoring binaural hearing to children who have been deaf from an early age. The uncoordinated and poor temporal information available from cochlear implants distorts perception of interaural timing differences normally important for sound localization and listening in noise. Moreover, binaural development can be compromised by bilateral and unilateral auditory deprivation. Here, we studied perception of both interaural level and timing differences in 79 children/adolescents using bilateral cochlear implants and 16 peers with normal hearing. They were asked on which side of their head they heard unilaterally or bilaterally presented click- or electrical pulse- trains. Interaural level cues were identified by most participants including adolescents with long periods of unilateral cochlear implant use and little bilateral implant experience. Interaural timing cues were not detected by new bilateral adolescent users, consistent with previous evidence. Evidence of binaural timing detection was, for the first time, found in children who had much longer implant experience but it was marked by poorer than normal sensitivity and abnormally strong dependence on current level differences between implants. In addition, children with prior unilateral implant use showed a higher proportion of responses to their first implanted sides than children implanted simultaneously. These data indicate that there are functional repercussions of developing binaural hearing through bilateral cochlear implants, particularly when provided sequentially; nonetheless, children have an opportunity to use these devices to hear better in noise and gain spatial hearing.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWe are able to hear from all directions around us

  • Unlike sight, we are able to hear from all directions around us

  • Perception of binaural level cues is rapidly established in most children with bilateral cochlear implants

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Summary

Introduction

We are able to hear from all directions around us. This is important for survival and communication. Directional hearing helps us to listen to one voice amongst many by comparing sounds reaching our two ears. The importance of binaural hearing is highlighted by the significant implications for language development and educational outcomes when unilateral hearing loss occurs in childhood [2,3,4]. We have attempted to restore binaural hearing in children with bilateral deafness by providing cochlear implants in each ear [5] but face a number of challenges including the abnormal electrical input of the cochlear implant and the effects of deafness during early development

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