A. Boothroyd, AUDITORY CAPACITY OF HEARING-IMPAIRED CHILDREN USING HEARING-AIDS ANDCOCHLEAR IMPLANTS - ISSUES OF EFFICACY AND ASSESSMENT, Scandinavian audiology, 26, 1997, pp. 17-25
The immediate goal of sensory assistance is to provide as much sensory
evidence as possible about the sound patterns of speech. To determine
how well this goal has been met calls for tests that are sensitive to
sensory capacity and insensitive to linguistic and cognitive status.
At the same time, the results should have predictive validity in terms
of the potential for developing speech perception skills. This paper
describes data obtained from paediatric hearing aid and cochlear impla
nt users by means of an imitative test of phonetic contrast perception
(IMSPAC). It is shown that the primary predictor of IMSPAC performanc
e for aided subjects is degree of hearing loss, with little or no infl
uence of age and communication mode. The primary predictors for Nucleu
s implantees, however, are communication mode and duration of use. The
distribution of scores in the implant group is similar to that of hea
ring aid users with hearing losses in the 90 to 99 dB range. The more
successful implantees (mostly, but not only, orally trained) perform L
ike hearing aid users with hearing losses in the 70 to 89 dB range. Th
e hearing aid data suggest that the IMSPAC test is effective in measur
ing auditory sensory capacity without confounding by linguistic status
. If this is true, the implant data must be interpreted as evidence of
the development of auditory perceptual skills during the post-implant
period. This interpretation carries important implications for issues
of cortical plasticity, acclimatization, the management of childhood
deafness, and the evaluation of sensory aid efficacy.