Reacquisition of contrastive stress in an adventitiously deaf speaker using a single-channel cochlear implant

Abstract
Acoustic correlates of contrastive stress, i.e., fundamental frequency (F0), duration, and intensity, and listener perceptions of stress, were investigated in a profoundly deaf subject (RS) pre/post single-channel cochlear implant and longitudinally, and compared to the overall patters of age-peer profoundly deaf (JM) and normally hearing subjects (DL). The stimuli were a group of general American English words in which a change of function from noun to verb is associated with a shift of stress from initial to final syllable, e.g., CON''trast versus conTRAST''. Precochlear implant, RS was unable to produce contrastive stress correctly. hearing one day post-stimulation resulted in significantly higher FO for initial and final stressed versus unstressed syllables. Four months post-stimulation, RS maintained significantly higher FO on stressed syllables, as well as generalization of significantly increased intensity and longer syllable duration differences for all stressed versus unstressed syllables. Perceptually, listeners judged RS''s contrastive stress placement as incorrect precochlear implant and as always correct post-cochlear implant. JM''s contrastive stress was judged as 96% correct, and DL''s contrastive stress placement was 100% correct. It was concluded that RS reacquired all acoustic correlates needed for appropriate differentiation of contrastive stress with longitudinal use of the cochlear implant.

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