Pc. Loizou et al., Speech recognition by normal-hearing and cochlear implant listeners as a function of intensity resolution, J ACOUST SO, 108(5), 2000, pp. 2377-2387
The importance of intensity resolution in terms of the number of intensity
steps needed for speech recognition was assessed for normal-hearing and coc
hlear implant listeners. In experiment I, the channel amplitudes extracted
from a six-channel continuous interleaved sampling (CIS) processor were qua
ntized into 2, 4, 8, 16, or 32 steps. Consonant recognition was assessed fo
r five cochlear implant listeners, using the Med-'El/CIS-link device, as a
function of the number of steps in the electrical dynamic range. Results sh
owed that eight steps within the dynamic range are sufficient for reaching
asymptotic performance in consonant recognition. These results suggest that
amplitude resolution is not a major factor in determining consonant identi
fication. In experiment 2, the relationship between spectral resolution (nu
mber of channels) and intensity resolution (number of steps) in normal-hear
ing listeners was investigated. Speech was filtered through 4-20 frequency
bands, synthesized as a linear combination of sine waves with amplitudes ex
tracted from the envelopes of the bandpassed waveforms, and then quantized
into 2-32 levels to produce stimuli with varying degrees of intensity resol
ution. Results showed that the number of steps needed to achieve asymptotic
performance was a function of the number of channels and the speech materi
al used. For vowels, asymptotic performance was obtained with four steps, w
hile for consonants, eight steps were needed for most channel conditions, c
onsistent with our findings in experiment 1. For sentences processed though
4 channels, 16 steps were needed to reach asymptotic performance, while fu
r sentences processed through 16 channels, 4 steps were needed. The results
with normal-hearing listeners on sentence recognition point to an inverse
relationship between spectral resolution and intensity resolution. When spe
ctral resolution is poor (i.e., a small number of channels is available) a
relatively fine intensity resolution is needed to achieve high levels of un
derstanding. Conversely, when the intensity resolution is poor, a high degr
ee of spectral resolution is needed to achieve asymptotic performance. The
results of this study, taken together with previous findings on the effect
of reduced dynamic range, suggest that the performance of cochlear implant
subjects is primarily limited by the small number (four to six) of channels
received, and not by the small number of intensity steps or reduced dynami
c range. (C) 2000 Acoustical Society of America. [S0001-4966(00)04911-0].