Can haptic stimulation enhance music perception in hearing-impaired listeners?
Can haptic stimulation enhance music perception in hearing-impaired listeners?
Cochlear implants (CIs) have been remarkably successful at restoring hearing in severely-to-profoundly hearing-impaired individuals. However, users often struggle to deconstruct complex auditory scenes with multiple simultaneous sounds, which can result in reduced music enjoyment and impaired speech understanding in background noise. Hearing aid users often have similar issues, though these are typically less acute. Several recent studies have shown that haptic stimulation can enhance CI listening by giving access to sound features that are poorly transmitted through the electrical CI signal. This “electro-haptic stimulation” improves melody recognition and pitch discrimination, as well as speech-in-noise performance and sound localization. The success of this approach suggests it could also enhance auditory perception in hearing-aid users and other hearing-impaired listeners. This review focuses on the use of haptic stimulation to enhance music perception in hearing-impaired listeners. Music is prevalent throughout everyday life, being critical to media such as film and video games, and often being central to events such as weddings and funerals. It represents the biggest challenge for signal processing, as it is typically an extremely complex acoustic signal, containing multiple simultaneous harmonic and inharmonic sounds. Signal-processing approaches developed for enhancing music perception could therefore have significant utility for other key issues faced by hearing-impaired listeners, such as understanding speech in noisy environments. This review first discusses the limits of music perception in hearing-impaired listeners and the limits of the tactile system. It then discusses the evidence around integration of audio and haptic stimulation in the brain. Next, the features, suitability, and success of current haptic devices for enhancing music perception are reviewed, as well as the signal-processing approaches that could be deployed in future haptic devices. Finally, the cutting-edge technologies that could be exploited for enhancing music perception with haptics are discussed. These include the latest micro motor and driver technology, low-power wireless technology, machine learning, big data, and cloud computing. New approaches for enhancing music perception in hearing-impaired listeners could substantially improve quality of life. Furthermore, effective haptic techniques for providing complex sound information could offer a non-invasive, affordable means for enhancing listening more broadly in hearing-impaired individuals.
cochlear implant, electro-haptic stimulation, hearing aid, multi-sensory, neuroprosthetic, pitch, sensory substitution, tactile aid
Fletcher, Mark
ac11588a-fafe-4dbb-8b3c-80a6ff030546
31 August 2021
Fletcher, Mark
ac11588a-fafe-4dbb-8b3c-80a6ff030546
Fletcher, Mark
(2021)
Can haptic stimulation enhance music perception in hearing-impaired listeners?
Frontiers in Neuroscience, 15, [723877].
(doi:10.3389/fnins.2021.723877).
Abstract
Cochlear implants (CIs) have been remarkably successful at restoring hearing in severely-to-profoundly hearing-impaired individuals. However, users often struggle to deconstruct complex auditory scenes with multiple simultaneous sounds, which can result in reduced music enjoyment and impaired speech understanding in background noise. Hearing aid users often have similar issues, though these are typically less acute. Several recent studies have shown that haptic stimulation can enhance CI listening by giving access to sound features that are poorly transmitted through the electrical CI signal. This “electro-haptic stimulation” improves melody recognition and pitch discrimination, as well as speech-in-noise performance and sound localization. The success of this approach suggests it could also enhance auditory perception in hearing-aid users and other hearing-impaired listeners. This review focuses on the use of haptic stimulation to enhance music perception in hearing-impaired listeners. Music is prevalent throughout everyday life, being critical to media such as film and video games, and often being central to events such as weddings and funerals. It represents the biggest challenge for signal processing, as it is typically an extremely complex acoustic signal, containing multiple simultaneous harmonic and inharmonic sounds. Signal-processing approaches developed for enhancing music perception could therefore have significant utility for other key issues faced by hearing-impaired listeners, such as understanding speech in noisy environments. This review first discusses the limits of music perception in hearing-impaired listeners and the limits of the tactile system. It then discusses the evidence around integration of audio and haptic stimulation in the brain. Next, the features, suitability, and success of current haptic devices for enhancing music perception are reviewed, as well as the signal-processing approaches that could be deployed in future haptic devices. Finally, the cutting-edge technologies that could be exploited for enhancing music perception with haptics are discussed. These include the latest micro motor and driver technology, low-power wireless technology, machine learning, big data, and cloud computing. New approaches for enhancing music perception in hearing-impaired listeners could substantially improve quality of life. Furthermore, effective haptic techniques for providing complex sound information could offer a non-invasive, affordable means for enhancing listening more broadly in hearing-impaired individuals.
Text
Fletcher (2021) Can Haptic Stimulation Enhance Music Perception in Hearing-Impaired Listeners
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 11 August 2021
Published date: 31 August 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
MF’s salary was funded by the William Demant Foundation. The article processing fee was funded by the Signal Processing, Audio and Hearing Group at the University of Southampton - Institute of Sound and Vibration Research.
Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2021 Fletcher.
Keywords:
cochlear implant, electro-haptic stimulation, hearing aid, multi-sensory, neuroprosthetic, pitch, sensory substitution, tactile aid
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 451150
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/451150
ISSN: 1662-4548
PURE UUID: 805c2a7c-00ba-4d50-a1a5-e952090ac292
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Date deposited: 14 Sep 2021 15:24
Last modified: 05 Jun 2024 18:00
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