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Review
. 2017 Sep/Oct;38(5):521-538.
doi: 10.1097/AUD.0000000000000435.

Multisensory Integration in Cochlear Implant Recipients

Affiliations
Review

Multisensory Integration in Cochlear Implant Recipients

Ryan A Stevenson et al. Ear Hear. 2017 Sep/Oct.

Abstract

Speech perception is inherently a multisensory process involving integration of auditory and visual cues. Multisensory integration in cochlear implant (CI) recipients is a unique circumstance in that the integration occurs after auditory deprivation and the provision of hearing via the CI. Despite the clear importance of multisensory cues for perception, in general, and for speech intelligibility, specifically, the topic of multisensory perceptual benefits in CI users has only recently begun to emerge as an area of inquiry. We review the research that has been conducted on multisensory integration in CI users to date and suggest a number of areas needing further research. The overall pattern of results indicates that many CI recipients show at least some perceptual gain that can be attributable to multisensory integration. The extent of this gain, however, varies based on a number of factors, including age of implantation and specific task being assessed (e.g., stimulus detection, phoneme perception, word recognition). Although both children and adults with CIs obtain audiovisual benefits for phoneme, word, and sentence stimuli, neither group shows demonstrable gain for suprasegmental feature perception. Additionally, only early-implanted children and the highest performing adults obtain audiovisual integration benefits similar to individuals with normal hearing. Increasing age of implantation in children is associated with poorer gains resultant from audiovisual integration, suggesting a sensitive period in development for the brain networks that subserve these integrative functions, as well as length of auditory experience. This finding highlights the need for early detection of and intervention for hearing loss, not only in terms of auditory perception, but also in terms of the behavioral and perceptual benefits of audiovisual processing. Importantly, patterns of auditory, visual, and audiovisual responses suggest that underlying integrative processes may be fundamentally different between CI users and typical-hearing listeners. Future research, particularly in low-level processing tasks such as signal detection will help to further assess mechanisms of multisensory integration for individuals with hearing loss, both with and without CIs.

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Conflict of interest statement

No conflicts of interest or sources of funding are declared for any of the other authors.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Example of audiovisual temporal synchrony function. The vertical-dotted line represents presentation of the auditory and visual stimuli synchronously. Positive values on the x-axis representing the visual stimulus presented first and negative values representing the auditory stimulus presented first.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Average audiovisual word and sentence recognition benefit of adults with CIs and adults with normal hearing in three separate studies on the x-axis. Error bars represent one standard error of the mean. There is no error bar for the CI bar of the Goh et al. (2001) study because it was a case study of one adult with a CI.

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