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Welcome to Naama's Blog. I hope you will ask any questions you have here in the comment area below. You can also post your thoughts on what I have written or anything else related to adult rehabilitation. Members may comment on any posting by logging into your account. If you are not a member but wish to comment, please send your submission to jhouk@acialliance.org . If you would like to write to me directly, please email me at: naama@acialliance.org. The Blog is intended as both a patient and a professional resource. This printable brochure may be used to refer adults and family members who may benefit.

 

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Tips for Broadening Listening Skills To Wide-Ranging Daily Situations

Posted By Naama Tsach, PhD, Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Most impossible goals can be met simply by breaking them down into bite-size chunks, writing them down, believing them, and going full speed ahead as if they were routine.
Don Lancaster

Although he is best known as an inventor and microcomputer engineer, this wonderful excerpt by Don Lancaster is so relevant to auditory skill development for CI recipients.

Many cochlear implant recipients note a gap between their ability to understand speech while practicing auditory training at home and their ability to understand speech in real life. Why is that? 

There are a number of possible reasons why this is the case. People typically conduct their auditory training:

  • While in favorable acoustic conditions (i.e., a quiet room and/or using streaming technology or assistive listening devices (ALDs)

  • Listening to a single speaker

  • Practicing speech understanding with speakers who have highly intelligible speech (i.e., professional narrators for audiobooks)

  • Using structured materials designed specifically for auditory training

  • Listening to speakers at a relatively slow speech pace

  • At a time when they are totally focused on listening, which is not characteristic of everyday life circumstances

Such auditory skill development is primarily helpful in specific listening situations such as having conversations in a quiet room with one person or familiar people, interacting with people who speak very clearly, participating in discussions on known or expected topics about which the person has prior knowledge, and in favorable acoustic and communication environments.

Communication in Daily Life is Complicated 

These auditory skills might not be sufficient when conversing with people who are either less familiar to the listener, have less intelligible speech, or both.  Auditory skill development may not be as useful when a CI recipient is moving about in a room, or when conversations are held in noisy places. Another challenging situation is when two people converse in the presence of other people with the expectation that everyone has been able to join the conversation and has heard and understood what has already been said.

How do you transition from understanding speech in favorable conditions to understanding speech in life?

  • Challenge yourself to understand more than one sentence at a time without visual clues. Gradually listen to several sentences without speechreading.

  • Practice having a conversation with a familiar person when you are simultaneously involved in another activity like painting or folding laundry. Don’t make this overly difficult by practicing conversations while occupied with noisy activities (i.e., washing dishes or listening to music) since it may be too difficult, even for people with typical hearing. 
  • When you are in a quiet room listening to videos or other auditory content on your computer or telephone, try the following:
    • Practice without streaming the materials directly to your speech processor
    • Sit six feet away from the sound source
    • Walk around the room while listening.  This is more challenging than listening and understanding speech while sitting in one place. This will help you gain experience in processing sound coming from different directions and at different intensities.

  • Practice your understanding of voicemail messages. Ask friends and family members to send you short voice messages on your phone. If needed, slow the pace of such messages to help with understanding.  Apple has directions on how to do that on their phones.

Make Listening More Challenging

  • Practice understanding children's speech. People with hearing loss often find it difficult to understand children's speech, which might be too soft or too fast or unclear. You can find many online videos of children talking. Choose videos with no or a minimum of bothersome background noise. You might turn on captions to help you practice understanding children's speech.

  • Expand the circle of people you talk with on the phone, especially those who are less (or not) familiar to you.

  • Practice understanding speech in real world background noise. Listen to speeches given by famous people. You can find videos of speeches from demonstrations or other events that often have background noise. Download captions ahead of time to support your understanding and use as necessary. 

  • Try to understand lyrics in songs. This activity is training for understanding speech in background noise. (You can find lyrics to songs on the Web; view them and then listen without the text in front of you.)

  • Learn to effectively use Assistive Listening Devices (sometimes called ALDs) and the special programs for listening in noisy situations available on your sound processor. 

  • Practice listening to a conversation with multiple speakers, rather than listening to just one person. You can also use recorded interviews and dialogues. Listening to two people talking to each other is more challenging than listening to contents presented by one person. 

  • Ask friends or family members to record themselves talking to each other and send the recording to you. It may be quite challenging, so ask them to speak relatively slowly and provide you with the topic of their conversation. 

  • Learn how to use speech-to-text technologies to help you participate in more social activities.

  • Try to be attentive and listen (almost) all the time!

  • Try to understand public announcements 

  • Practice your hearing ability even if you are not part of the conversation. Listen and try to understand discussions held near to you.  

  • Eavesdrop and try to understand what people next to you are talking about on their phone.

Initially many of these activities are likely to be difficult and tiring. Over time they will become more natural, and you may even understand speech unintentionally and without extraordinary effort.

It takes time and practice, but setting high goals is always the first step!

Good luck.

Tags:  Adult Rehabilitation  Cochlear Implants 

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Listening to Podcasts

Posted By Naama Tsach, PhD, Friday, June 18, 2021

Listening to Podcasts

Podcasts started to become more commonplace around 2005. Now we hear about them frequently and are reminded of their popularity when we see people walking and exercising with their earphones plugged in—listening to podcasts. Podcasts have become so popular!

Today, I will discuss how people with cochlear implants may enjoy them, too.

As a pure listening activity, podcasts allow people to listen while being occupied with other activities. Consequently, one may assume that podcasts are not a feasible listening activity for people with hearing loss (including those with cochlear implants).

Podcasts are often more challenging for auditory comprehension compared with audiobooks or recorded articles.  There are a number of reasons why that is the case:

  • Hosts are usually not professional readers; therefore, their speech may be difficult to comprehend. In many instances, the reader is speaking too fast for someone with hearing loss to follow.
  • Because podcasts are often given in a spontaneous manner, they may contain more pauses, repetitions, corrections, false starts, and hesitation. This may frustrate listeners with CIs.
  • The sound quality in podcasts may not necessarily be as high quality as other recorded options. Indeed, there is a wide range of quality in the podcasts relative to the recordings and editing.
  • Background music or other noises can make auditory comprehension difficult.
  • When the podcast is a conversation between two people, listeners must distinguish between the two (or more) speaker voices, voices which may have different speech characteristics. This may complicate listening and make it more difficult than understanding a single speaker. There can be rapid transitions from topic to topic in such conversations, adding to the challenges of following and understanding the discussion.

So, why even try? What makes podcasts valuable?

 These are a number of reasons people like podcast:

  • Podcasts use a different and exciting presentation of a topic and allow for a deeper level of content compared with radio.
  • Comparing podcasts and newspaper articles, podcasts may present information in a less formal and processed way, allowing listeners more space to form an opinion and encouraging them to draw conclusions.
  • Podcasts may be less structured and more like natural and even intimate monologues or conversations; they provide the listeners with a less filtered and more authentic experience.
  • Listening to podcasts provides listeners with a glimpse into the personality of the hosts; listeners can relate to them. Moreover, when the host invites somebody to join the episode, it allows the listeners to experience a dynamic between them and the host.
  • There are many podcasts covering many categories making it easy to find a podcast to connect with.
  • Podcasts can be used as auditory training material for advanced CI users who are able to comprehend speech on other recorded materials such as (some) TED talks (without captions), audiobooks and recorded articles. 
What can a CI recipient do to maximize the opportunity to listen and enjoy a podcast?
  • Begin by listening to video-podcasts where you can also rely on speech reading and captions when needed.
  • Find podcasts that have captions or transcripts. Use the transcript and captions to support your understanding while listening, or read the transcript before starting to listen to the podcast. It will make the experience not only beneficial in terms of auditory training, but also rewarding and fun.
  • Choose to listen to podcasts with speakers who have clear and highly intelligible speech and who are speaking at a slow pace.
  • Select podcasts with high sound quality and a minimum amount of background noise.
    Choose topics that you have some knowledge about; having some background will support your comprehension and help you to enjoy it, even if you miss some words.
  • If you can slow down the speaking speed, try to do that; reducing the speed to 75% of the original speaking speed may be helpful.
  • Listen in a quietest room and use an assistive listening device to stream the sound directly to your processor(s).

A good podcast to start with

  • Presented by a professional reader with highly intelligible speech speaking at a relatively slow speaking rate
  • Excellent sound quality
  • Although there is background music, it is played only during the first two minutes and the last 45 seconds of the podcast
  • Captions and transcript are available!

https://www.leonardoenglish.com/podcasts/leonardo-da-vinci

Good luck!

Tags:  Blog  Cochlear Implants  Podcasts 

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The mission of the American Cochlear Implant (ACI) Alliance is to advance access to the gift of hearing provided by cochlear implantation through research, advocacy and awareness.