The Spatial Selective Auditory Attention of Cochlear Implant Users in Different Conversational Sound Levels
Sara Akbarzadeh, Sungmin Lee, Chin-Tuan Tan

TL;DR
This study investigates how different conversational sound levels affect auditory attention mechanisms in cochlear implant users compared to normal hearing individuals, revealing that sound level impacts attention differently based on hearing mode.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the influence of sound levels on auditory attention in CI users, highlighting the need for loudness control in daily conversations.
Findings
Increasing sound level degrades attention in electric hearing.
Higher sound levels improve attention in acoustic hearing.
Normal hearing listeners show no significant change with sound level.
Abstract
In multi speakers environments, cochlear implant (CI) users may attend to a target sound source in a different manner from the normal hearing (NH) individuals during a conversation. This study attempted to investigate the effect of conversational sound levels on the mechanisms adopted by CI and NH listeners in selective auditory attention and how it affects their daily conversation. Nine CI users (five bilateral, three unilateral, and one bimodal) and eight NH listeners participated in this study. The behavioral speech recognition scores were collected using a matrix sentences test and neural tracking to speech envelope was recorded using electroencephalography (EEG). Speech stimuli were presented at three different levels (75, 65, and 55 dB SPL) in the presence of two maskers from three spatially separated speakers. Different combinations of assisted/impaired hearing modes were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation · Noise Effects and Management · Neuroscience and Music Perception
