Objective: To assess overall speech intelligibility in adolescent cochlear implant speakers during quiet and multispeaker babble conditions. Study Design: A cross-sectional assessment of intelligibility incorporating group (auditory-oral versus total communication speakers), sentence context (high versus low contexts), and background conditions (quiet versus multispeaker babble). Setting: A camp designed to assess adolescents over a concentrated period. Participants: Fifty-seven adolescents who participated in an earlier study when they were 8 to 9 years old examining functional outcomes of speech perception, speech production, and language were asked to participate in follow-up study. Methods: Speech intelligibility was assessed by asking ...
Purpose: The current study is a preliminary study to examine whether children with hearing loss woul...
<div><p>Cochlear implants provide individuals who are deaf with access to speech. Although substanti...
Cochlear implants (CI) allow children with hearing loss (HL) to achieve speech perception and produc...
Objective: To assess overall speech intelligibility in adolescent cochlear implant speakers during q...
The objectives of this study were to (a) evaluate changes in speech intelligibility in a group of 11...
Purpose: This study examines the influence of voice quality and multi-talker babble noise on process...
The current study examined sentence recognition across speaking styles (conversational, neutral, and...
Profound hearing loss is a disability that affects personality and when it involves teenagers before...
This study investigated phoneme accuracy in cochlear implanted (CI) children using auditory-oral ver...
Objective. To describe the open set speech perception performance for 8 congenitally deaf adolescent...
Contains fulltext : 70966.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVES: To...
© 2013 Dr. Colleen Maree HoltThe development of the cochlear implant (CI) has provided access to spe...
Speech intelligibility Summary Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the long-term speech percepti...
This PhD project is conducted within the discipline of audiology. The investigation methods are quan...
Purpose: Speech signal degradation such as a voice disorder presented in quiet or in combination wit...
Purpose: The current study is a preliminary study to examine whether children with hearing loss woul...
<div><p>Cochlear implants provide individuals who are deaf with access to speech. Although substanti...
Cochlear implants (CI) allow children with hearing loss (HL) to achieve speech perception and produc...
Objective: To assess overall speech intelligibility in adolescent cochlear implant speakers during q...
The objectives of this study were to (a) evaluate changes in speech intelligibility in a group of 11...
Purpose: This study examines the influence of voice quality and multi-talker babble noise on process...
The current study examined sentence recognition across speaking styles (conversational, neutral, and...
Profound hearing loss is a disability that affects personality and when it involves teenagers before...
This study investigated phoneme accuracy in cochlear implanted (CI) children using auditory-oral ver...
Objective. To describe the open set speech perception performance for 8 congenitally deaf adolescent...
Contains fulltext : 70966.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVES: To...
© 2013 Dr. Colleen Maree HoltThe development of the cochlear implant (CI) has provided access to spe...
Speech intelligibility Summary Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the long-term speech percepti...
This PhD project is conducted within the discipline of audiology. The investigation methods are quan...
Purpose: Speech signal degradation such as a voice disorder presented in quiet or in combination wit...
Purpose: The current study is a preliminary study to examine whether children with hearing loss woul...
<div><p>Cochlear implants provide individuals who are deaf with access to speech. Although substanti...
Cochlear implants (CI) allow children with hearing loss (HL) to achieve speech perception and produc...