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Cochlear Implant Users Experience the Sound-To-Music Effect

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posted on 2024-02-12, 11:00 authored by Anna V. Kasdan, Iliza M. Butera, Andrea J. DeFreese, Jess Rowland, Allison Leich Hilbun, Reyna L. Gordon, Mark T. Wallace, René H. Gifford

The speech-to-song illusion is a robust effect where repeated speech induces the perception of singing; this effect has been extended to repeated excerpts of environmental sounds (sound-to-music effect). Here, we asked whether repetition could elicit musical percepts in cochlear implant (CI) users, who experience challenges with perceiving music due to both physiological and device limitations. Thirty adult CI users and thirty age-matched controls with normal hearing (NH) completed two repetition experiments for speech and nonspeech sounds (water droplets). We hypothesized that CI users would experience the sound-to-music effect from temporal/rhythmic cues alone, but to a lesser magnitude compared to NH controls, given the limited access to spectral information CI users receive from their implants. We found that CI users did experience the sound-to-music effect but to a lesser degree compared to NH participants. Musicality ratings were not associated with musical training or frequency resolution, and among CI users, clinical variables like duration of hearing loss also did not influence ratings. Cochlear implants provide a strong clinical model for disentangling the effects of spectral and temporal information in an acoustic signal; our results suggest that temporal cues are sufficient to perceive the sound-to-music effect when spectral resolution is limited. Additionally, incorporating short repetitions into music specially designed for CI users may provide a promising way for them to experience music.

Funding

This work was supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program award and NIDCD F31DC020112 to AVK, NIDCD F31DC015956 to IMB, VICTR Award VR52433 to AD, NIDCD R01 DC016977 to RLG, and NIDCD R01 DC009404 to RHG. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funders.

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