PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Looking beyond speech recognition to evaluate cochlear implants

Sound quality from cochlear implants plays a much larger role in daily functioning and well-being.

2025-10-14
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2025 – More than a million people around the world rely on cochlear implants (CIs) to hear. CI effectiveness is generally evaluated through speech recognition tests, and despite how widespread they are, CI sound quality is typically not considered an indicator of users’ quality of life.

In JASA Express Letters, published on behalf of the Acoustical Society of America by AIP Publishing, researchers from Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Ohio State University evaluated the relationships between sound quality, speech recognition, and quality-of-life outcomes for CI users.

Hearing-related quality of life encompasses the impact of auditory abilities, communication, social participation, emotional well-being, and daily activities.

“For someone with normal hearing, imagine trying to have a conversation while listening through an old radio, but you’re not quite on the right channel frequency and there’s poor reception,” said author Katelyn Berg.

This is what the world sounds like with a poor-quality CI. A speaker’s voice can seem robotic or tinny, and music lacks richness. This can be due to a variety of technological constraints in the CIs, like channel interactions between electrodes or other acoustic fidelity issues.

The researchers found CI sound quality leads to a 32% variance in users’ quality of life — in contrast, speech recognition has virtually no predictive power over quality of life. In their study, speech recognition only correlated with sound quality under noisy conditions, suggesting it is particularly relevant in situations with background noise and different sound sources — in other words, the real world.

“This challenges decades of clinical practice focused primarily on using speech understanding in quiet as the primary metric for cochlear implant success,” said Berg.

Forty-one CI users ranging in age from 18 to 80 participated in the study. They completed a set of computerized speech recognition tests, and answered two questionnaires — the Speech, Spatial and Qualities (SSQ) questionnaire, and the Cochlear Implant Quality of Life (CIQOL) questionnaire, both validated assessment tools within the audiological field. Part of the SSQ evaluates perceived sound quality, ability to segregate sounds, and listening effort. CIQOL measures quality of life across six domains: communication, emotional, entertainment, environment, listening effort, and social functioning.

The group plans to study the differences in quality of different types of sound, particularly speech and music, and to optimize how the device is programmed based on the placement of the electrode array. They emphasize the implications of this work on moving beyond quiet CI testing environments.

“While speech recognition testing remains important, incorporating sound quality measures could provide a more complete picture of cochlear implant outcomes and guide more targeted interventions for the challenging listening situations patients actually need to navigate in their daily lives,” said Berg.

###

The article “Sound quality, not speech recognition, explains cochlear implant-related quality of life outcomes” is authored by Katelyn A. Berg, Hugh M. Birky, Victoria A. Sevich, Aaron C. Moberly, and Terrin N. Tamati. It will appear in JASA Express Letters on Oct. 14, 2025 (DOI: 10.1121/10.0039069). After that date, it can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0039069.

ABOUT THE JOURNAL

JASA Express Letters is a gold open-access journal devoted to the rapid and open dissemination of important new research results and technical discussion in all fields of acoustics. It serves physical scientists, life scientists, engineers, psychologists, physiologists, architects, musicians, and speech communication specialists who wish to quickly report the results of their acoustical research in letter-sized contributions. See https://pubs.aip.org/asa/jel.

ABOUT THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

The Acoustical Society of America (ASA) is the premier international scientific society in acoustics devoted to the science and technology of sound. Its 7,000 members worldwide represent a broad spectrum of the study of acoustics. ASA publications include The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (the world’s leading journal on acoustics), JASA Express Letters, Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics, Acoustics Today magazine, books, and standards on acoustics. The society also holds two major scientific meetings each year. See https://acousticalsociety.org/.

###

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Tracking infectious disease spread via commuting pattern data

2025-10-14
WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2025 — For countless millions across the globe, commuting to work or school is an everyday routine. But during a pandemic, the practice can contribute enormously to the spread of infectious disease, a fact that many traditional metapopulation models often overlook because they are designed primarily for migration and treat people as if they rarely move locally. In Chaos, by AIP Publishing, a team of researchers from South Korea introduced a Commuter Metapopulation Model (CMPM) to address ...

Underweight children cost the NHS as much per child as children with obesity, Oxford study finds.

2025-10-14
The NHS incurs an estimated £340 million in additional healthcare costs annually due to weight-related health problems in children – but it is not just obesity driving the costs. New research from the University of Oxford reveals that underweight children need comparable medical support as those who are severely obese, challenging assumptions about childhood health priorities. The study, published in JAMA Network Open and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), provides the first national picture of healthcare costs linked to children’s weight, using NHS electronic health records from more than 268,000 children ...

Wetland plant-fungus combo cleans up ‘forever chemicals’ in a pilot study

2025-10-14
Wetlands act as nature’s kidneys: They trap sediments, absorb excess nutrients and turn pollutants into less harmful substances. Now, the list of pollutants wetland plants can remove includes per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). From a greenhouse study, researchers in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology report that moisture-loving yellow flag irises and fungi on their roots are a promising combination for PFAS removal. As part of a constructed wetland, this pair could effectively treat contaminated wastewater. “Our study shows that a type of fungus ...

Traditional Chinese medicine combined with peginterferon α-2b in chronic hepatitis B

2025-10-14
Background and objectives Peginterferon-α treatment exhibits low rates of the serological conversion rate of hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg) and the negative conversion rate of hepatitis B virus (HBV) DNA, with significant myelosuppression leading to treatment discontinuation in some patients. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) may ameliorate liver inflammation and modulate immune responses. This study aims to investigate the efficacy of combining TCM with pegylated-interferon (PEG-IFN) α-2b and its impact on myelosuppression adverse effects. Methods This ...

APS and SPR honor Dr. Wendy K. Chung with the 2026 Mary Ellen Avery Neonatal Research Award

2025-10-14
HOUSTON, October 14, 2025 – The American Pediatric Society (APS) and the Society for Pediatric Research (SPR) are pleased to announce Wendy K. Chung, MD, PhD, as the 2026 Mary Ellen Avery Neonatal Research Award recipient. This award honors a pediatric investigator who has made important contributions to neonatal health through basic or translational research. Dr. Wendy Chung, MD, PhD, is the Mary Ellen Avery Professor of Pediatrics, Chief of Pediatrics, and Pediatrician-in-Chief at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School. An internationally recognized ...

The Gabriella Miller Kids First Data Resource Center (Kids First DRC) has launched the Variant Workbench

2025-10-14
The Gabriella Miller Kids First Data Resource Center (Kids First DRC) has launched the Variant Workbench, an innovative tool designed to dramatically accelerate research into childhood diseases.  For researchers studying genetic diseases, this new resource shifts the focus from the complex, time-consuming task of managing massive datasets to the core work of scientific exploration. The Variant Workbench functions as an interactive research environment within the cloud-based CAVATICA platform, essentially serving as a virtual lab bench for discovery. Previously, ...

Yeast survives Martian conditions

2025-10-14
Any life on Mars in the past, present, or future would have to contend with challenging conditions including, among others, shock waves from meteorite impacts and soil perchlorates—highly oxidizing salts that destabilize hydrogen bonds and hydrophobic interactions. Purusharth I. Rajyaguru and colleagues subjected Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which is a widely used model yeast, to shock waves and perchlorates. The authors chose the yeast in part because it has already been studied in space. When stressed, yeast, humans, and many other organisms form ribonucleoprotein ...

Calcium could be key to solving stability issues in sodium-ion batteries

2025-10-14
Rechargeable batteries are a fundamental part of today's technological landscape, powering everything from our personal devices to large-scale infrastructure. While many types of rechargeable batteries exist, lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) are by far the most ubiquitous, owing to their outstanding energy density, long life cycle, and low self-discharge rate. However, lithium is rather a scarce element with a very uneven distribution throughout the world, prompting research into batteries made from other materials. Over the past ...

Can smoother surfaces prevent hydrogen embrittlement?

2025-10-14
As the world strives to achieve carbon neutrality and slow down climate change, hydrogen has emerged as a promising fuel and energy carrier. Producing only water when consumed, hydrogen could help decarbonize industrial processes, power generation, and transportation. However, fulfilling this vision requires massive infrastructure—from high-pressure storage tanks to dedicated pipelines—that must withstand constant material stress due to the nature of hydrogen.   One of the biggest obstacles is hydrogen embrittlement. This is a complex phenomenon where metals, including ...

Heart rate changes predict depression treatment success with magnetic brain stimulation

2025-10-14
GÖTTINGEN, Germany, 14 October 2025 -- Researchers led by Dr. Roberto Goya-Maldonado at the University Medical Center Göttingen have identified a rapid physiological marker that predicts which patients with major depression will respond to magnetic brain stimulation therapy. The peer-reviewed research article, published in Brain Medicine, found that patients whose heart rates slowed within 45 seconds of starting treatment showed significantly greater improvement in depressive symptoms six weeks later. Uncovering ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Pollen exposure linked to poorer exam results taken at the end of secondary school

7 hours 18 mins may be optimal sleep length for avoiding type 2 diabetes precursor

Around 6 deaths a year linked to clubbing in the UK

Children’s development set back years by Covid lockdowns, study reveals

Four decades of data give unique insight into the Sun’s inner life

Urban trees can absorb more CO₂ than cars emit during summer

Fund for Science and Technology awards $15 million to Scripps Oceanography

New NIH grant advances Lupus protein research

New farm-scale biochar system could cut agricultural emissions by 75 percent while removing carbon from the atmosphere

From herbal waste to high performance clean water material: Turning traditional medicine residues into powerful biochar

New sulfur-iron biochar shows powerful ability to lock up arsenic and cadmium in contaminated soils

AI-driven chart review accurately identifies potential rare disease trial participants in new study

Paleontologist Stephen Chester and colleagues reveal new clues about early primate evolution

UF research finds a gentler way to treat aggressive gum disease

Strong alcohol policy could reduce cancer in Canada

Air pollution from wildfires linked to higher rate of stroke

Tiny flows, big insights: microfluidics system boosts super-resolution microscopy

Pennington Biomedical researcher publishes editorial in leading American Heart Association journal

New tool reveals the secrets of HIV-infected cells

HMH scientists calculate breathing-brain wave rhythms in deepest sleep

Electron microscopy shows ‘mouse bite’ defects in semiconductors

Ochsner Children's CEO joins Make-A-Wish Board

Research spotlight: Exploring the neural basis of visual imagination

Wildlife imaging shows that AI models aren’t as smart as we think

Prolonged drought linked to instability in key nitrogen-cycling microbes in Connecticut salt marsh

Self-cleaning fuel cells? Researchers reveal steam-powered fix for ‘sulfur poisoning’

Bacteria found in mouth and gut may help protect against severe peanut allergic reactions

Ultra-processed foods in preschool years associated with behavioural difficulties in childhood

A fanged frog long thought to be one species is revealing itself to be several

Weill Cornell Medicine selected for Prostate Cancer Foundation Challenge Award

[Press-News.org] Looking beyond speech recognition to evaluate cochlear implants
Sound quality from cochlear implants plays a much larger role in daily functioning and well-being.