Audiology Research (Apr 2021)

Adult Users of the Oticon Medical Neuro Cochlear Implant System Benefit from Beamforming in the High Frequencies

  • Bianca Bastos Cordeiro,
  • Marcos Roberto Banhara,
  • Carlos Maurício Cardeal Mendes,
  • Fabiana Danieli,
  • Ariane Laplante-Lévesque,
  • Chadlia Karoui,
  • Michel Hoen,
  • Marine Ardoint,
  • Fanny Gauvrit,
  • Romane Demullier,
  • Christophe Vincent

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/audiolres11020016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
pp. 179 – 191

Abstract

Read online

The Oticon Medical Neuro cochlear implant system includes the modes Opti Omni and Speech Omni, the latter providing beamforming (i.e., directional selectivity) in the high frequencies. Two studies compared sentence identification scores of adult cochlear implant users with Opti Omni and Speech Omni. In Study 1, a double-blind longitudinal crossover study, 12 new users trialed Opti Omni or Speech Omni (random allocation) for three months, and their sentence identification in quiet and noise (+10 dB signal-to-noise ratio) with the trialed mode were measured. The same procedure was repeated for the second mode. In Study 2, a single-blind study, 11 experienced users performed a speech identification task in quiet and at relative signal-to-noise ratios ranging from −3 to +18 dB with Opti Omni and Speech Omni. The Study 1 scores in quiet and in noise were significantly better with Speech Omni than with Opti Omni. Study 2 scores were significantly better with Speech Omni than with Opti Omni at +6 and +9 dB signal-to-noise ratios. Beamforming in the high frequencies, as implemented in Speech Omni, leads to improved speech identification in medium levels of background noise, where cochlear implant users spend most of their day.

Keywords