# Individual variation in suprasegmental perception: insights from adults with typical hearing and cochlear implants

**Authors:** Terrin N. Tamati, Erin M. Ingvalson

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1652000 · 2026-01-06

## TL;DR

This paper explores how individual differences in cognitive and linguistic abilities affect how people with typical hearing and cochlear implants perceive speech cues like pitch and intonation.

## Contribution

The paper introduces the idea that cognitive-linguistic factors, not just device limitations, influence suprasegmental perception in cochlear implant users.

## Key findings

- Cognitive-linguistic factors significantly influence suprasegmental perception in cochlear implant users.
- Tailored rehabilitation strategies could improve suprasegmental perception by addressing individual differences.
- Device limitations alone cannot fully explain variability in cochlear implant outcomes.

## Abstract

Individuals vary in their ability to perceive suprasegmental cues, such as pitch, intensity, and duration, to make linguistic and nonlinguistic judgments, such as lexical stress, intonation, talker identity, and vocal emotion perception. For adult cochlear implant (CI) users, limitations in pitch perception significantly impair linguistic and nonlinguistic suprasegmental perception, creating barriers to effective real-world communication. While device-related factors are often emphasized in explaining variability in CI outcomes, growing evidence suggests that cognitive-linguistic factors play a critical role in shaping pitch-based suprasegmental perception. In this Perspective, we examine how cognitive-linguistic and experiential factors influence suprasegmental perception in both typically hearing listeners and adult CI users. We argue that these listener-level differences are essential to understanding variability in CI outcomes, offering insight beyond the effects of device limitations. We propose shifting from group-level generalizations to tailored rehabilitation strategies that target individual needs. Potential approaches include segmental speech training, auditory-cognitive training, and targeted pitch perception training. By identifying malleable sources of individual variation, we aim to support more personalized strategies to improve suprasegmental perception for both typically-hearing and hearing-impaired adults.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** and hearing-impaired (MESH:D034381)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12815720