In this study, we explored the influence of time factors (age at implant, time with cochlear implant and age), complex working memory and phonological short-term memory on lexical and grammatical development in congenitally deaf children with cochlear implants. Fifteen children (aged 5 years 4 months to 11 years 5 months) were examined with the use of several linguistic and cognitive measures after a minimum of 18 months of implant use. Phonological short-term memory was assessed with non-word repetition, where the percentage of correctly repeated consonants and vowels was counted. For the assessment of lexical acquisition. a novel word learning task was administered. Receptive and expressive grammar was tested. Our results corroborate earlier findings on the influence of phonological short-term memory on novel word learning. The percentage of vowels correctly produced in non-word repetition was more important in this group than age at implant, not only for novel word learning. but also for receptive and expressive grammar.
The main aim of this study was to validate a new technique, neural response telemetry (NRT), for measuring the electrically evoked compound action potential in adult cochlear implant users via their Nucleus C124M implant. Thirty-eight adults were evaluated with a variety of measurement procedures with the NRT software. Electrically evoked compound action potentials were obtained in 31 of the 38 adults (81.6%) and in 132 of the 160 electrodes (82.5%) tested. In addition to validating this technique, we also established a set of default clinical test parameters.
Four groups of subjects have been investigated, using a manual phase audiometer. Group 1 consisted of 20 normal-hearing subjects. Group 2 of 22 subjects with unilateral or asymmetric cochlear hearing loss. Group 3 of 14 subjects with surgically verified CPA tumours, and Group 4 of 15 subjects with unilateral conductive impairment. In this report we suggest an upper borderline value for detecting interaural time differences of 120 microseconds. If the subject is able to detect only a value exceeding 120 microseconds, there is likely to be a retrocochlear lesion.
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