4.6 Article

Multisensory Integration-Attention Trade-Off in Cochlear-Implanted Deaf Individuals

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.683804

Keywords

multisensory integration; focused attention; divided attention; cochlear implant; audiovisual; speech perception

Categories

Funding

  1. EU Horizon 2020 ERC Advanced Grant ORIENT [693400]
  2. Cochlear Benelux NV
  3. Radboud University Medical Center
  4. Radboud University
  5. European Research Council (ERC) [693400] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Our study demonstrates that in divided-attention tasks, unisensory speech listening and reading are negatively impacted for CI users, while this effect does not apply to normal-hearing individuals.
The cochlear implant (CI) allows profoundly deaf individuals to partially recover hearing. Still, due to the coarse acoustic information provided by the implant, CI users have considerable difficulties in recognizing speech, especially in noisy environments. CI users therefore rely heavily on visual cues to augment speech recognition, more so than normal-hearing individuals. However, it is unknown how attention to one (focused) or both (divided) modalities plays a role in multisensory speech recognition. Here we show that unisensory speech listening and reading were negatively impacted in divided-attention tasks for CI users-but not for normal-hearing individuals. Our psychophysical experiments revealed that, as expected, listening thresholds were consistently better for the normal-hearing, while lipreading thresholds were largely similar for the two groups. Moreover, audiovisual speech recognition for normal-hearing individuals could be described well by probabilistic summation of auditory and visual speech recognition, while CI users were better integrators than expected from statistical facilitation alone. Our results suggest that this benefit in integration comes at a cost. Unisensory speech recognition is degraded for CI users when attention needs to be divided across modalities. We conjecture that CI users exhibit an integration-attention trade-off. They focus solely on a single modality during focused-attention tasks, but need to divide their limited attentional resources in situations with uncertainty about the upcoming stimulus modality. We argue that in order to determine the benefit of a CI for speech recognition, situational factors need to be discounted by presenting speech in realistic or complex audiovisual environments.

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