Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4355159 | Hearing Research | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Results of alternating least squares scaling (ALSCAL) analysis consistently demonstrate that a change in place of stimulation is in the same perceptual dimension as a change in acoustic frequency. However, the relative perceptual differences between the acoustic and the electric stimuli varied greatly across subjects. A degree of perceptual separation between acoustic and electric stimulation (quantified by relative dimensional weightings from an INDSCAL analysis) was hypothesized that would indicate a change in perceptual quality, but also be predictive of performance with combined acoustic and electric hearing. Perceptual separation between acoustic and electric stimuli was observed for some subjects. However, no relationship between the degree of perceptual separation and performance was found.
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Authors
Katrien Vermeire, David M. Landsberger, Peter Schleich, Paul H. Van de Heyning,