Guest guest Posted April 11, 2006 Report Share Posted April 11, 2006 Hello Dr. Inverso; I'd be happy to answer your questions. I'm late deafened, began losing my hearing at age 38 (I'm 51 now). 1) I don't know that I 'needed' to hear environmental sounds, as much as missed them, and wanted to hear them. Birds, rain, thunder would be my top picks. After them comes 'everything else'. I want, and expect to hear most everything. I want to hear everything hearing people hear. 2) I had absolute expectation that I would hear environmental sounds, as well as speech, and that they would be more easily heard and identified than speech. 3) Since my implant, 1 year ago, I can certainly hear and identify most environmental sounds. Actually it's amusing that if I don't recognize a sound, once I have identified it, I don't forget it again. Hope this helps! Good luck on your dissertation! Binns ----Original Message Follows---- From: " dr.inverso " <dr.inverso@...> Reply- Subject: Non-Linguistic (Engvironmental) sound recognition with CI Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 00:25:08 -0000 Hello there, My name is Yell Inverso, and I am an audiologist and researcher who has worked with both pre and postlingually deafened CI users for years. For my Ph.D. dissertation I am looking into how adult implant users feel about environmental or non-linguisic sounds. I have a few questions that I would like to ask, would anyone be willing to answer these questions for me? My eventual goal is to help the implant companies make these types of sounds, including music, sound better with implant processing. Here are the specific questions I had: 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds that you most felt you needed to hear? 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental sounds and music) would be available to you? 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and recognize these types of sounds? Thank you so much in advance for taking the time to answer these questions. If anyone has any specific questions for me (or if you care to send your responses or personal stories to me in an email), you can email me directly at dr.inverso@... Thank you in advance for your time and consideration, Dr. Yell Inverso Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2006 Report Share Posted April 11, 2006 , Thank you for your response. I really appreciate your help. How does music sound to you, do you feel as though you hear and appreciate music as well as you had anticipated you would? Thanks Dr. Inverso, pleaes, call me Yell > > Hello Dr. Inverso; > I'd be happy to answer your questions. I'm late deafened, began losing my > hearing at age 38 (I'm 51 now). > > 1) I don't know that I 'needed' to hear environmental sounds, as much as > missed them, and wanted to hear them. Birds, rain, thunder would be my top > picks. After them comes 'everything else'. I want, and expect to hear most > everything. I want to hear everything hearing people hear. > > 2) I had absolute expectation that I would hear environmental sounds, as > well as speech, and that they would be more easily heard and identified than > speech. > > 3) Since my implant, 1 year ago, I can certainly hear and identify most > environmental sounds. Actually it's amusing that if I don't recognize a > sound, once I have identified it, I don't forget it again. > > Hope this helps! Good luck on your dissertation! > > Binns > > ----Original Message Follows---- > From: " dr.inverso " <dr.inverso@...> > Reply- > > Subject: Non-Linguistic (Engvironmental) sound recognition with CI > Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 00:25:08 -0000 > > Hello there, > > My name is Yell Inverso, and I am an audiologist and researcher who > has worked with both pre and postlingually deafened CI users for > years. For my Ph.D. dissertation I am looking into how adult implant > users feel about environmental or non-linguisic sounds. I have a few > questions that I would like to ask, would anyone be willing to answer > these questions for me? My eventual goal is to help the implant > companies make these types of sounds, including music, sound better > with implant processing. > > Here are the specific questions I had: > 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds > that you most felt you needed to hear? > > 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- > linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental > sounds and music) would be available to you? > > 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and > recognize these types of sounds? > > Thank you so much in advance for taking the time to answer these > questions. If anyone has any specific questions for me (or if you > care to send your responses or personal stories to me in an email), > you can email me directly at dr.inverso@... > > Thank you in advance for your time and consideration, > > Dr. Yell Inverso > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2006 Report Share Posted April 11, 2006 Dr. Inverso, Answers to questions... 1) Not in any particular order...Music, traffic related, sounds of nature, phones. I will say that I love to listen to music most of all environmental sounds. 2) Oh, it definitely was my expectation. 3) Most certainly. I hear them and better than when I had my HA. I have been most pleased with all environmental sounds especially music. The only sound that is still odd to me is the sound of thunder. For the most it is similar but there are subtle differences that I'm still getting used to. Dale " dr.inverso " <dr.inverso@...> wrote: Hello there, My name is Yell Inverso, and I am an audiologist and researcher who has worked with both pre and postlingually deafened CI users for years. For my Ph.D. dissertation I am looking into how adult implant users feel about environmental or non-linguisic sounds. I have a few questions that I would like to ask, would anyone be willing to answer these questions for me? My eventual goal is to help the implant companies make these types of sounds, including music, sound better with implant processing. Here are the specific questions I had: 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds that you most felt you needed to hear? 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental sounds and music) would be available to you? 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and recognize these types of sounds? Thank you so much in advance for taking the time to answer these questions. If anyone has any specific questions for me (or if you care to send your responses or personal stories to me in an email), you can email me directly at dr.inverso@... Thank you in advance for your time and consideration, Dr. Yell Inverso Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 11, 2006 Report Share Posted April 11, 2006 Hi Dr. Yell Inverso, Glad to help, and please let me know if you have any questions or comments. 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds that you most felt you needed to hear? I had enlarged vestibular canals since I was about three years old, so my hearing declined over time. I'm currently at age 31 years. I've worn analog and digital hearing aids the whole time, and heard many environmental sounds (i.e., siren, engine, wind, dog barking, music, telephone, doorbell, TV, et cetera). I apparently took them for granted. I couldn't hear the birds chirping, airplanes in the air, et cetera. 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental sounds and music) would be available to you? I expected to be able to hear the musical equipments (i.e., flutes, piano, saxophone, etc), animal callings (bird chirping and cawing, dog panting, cat meowing, etc), nature calling (i.e., thunder, breeze, etc), mechanical sounds (computer, air conditioner, etc) 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and recognize these types of sounds? Believe it or not, my current audiogram reveals that my CI hearing level is now at 10 dB that is above the speech banana! That is absolutely amazing for me! I heard many more environmental sounds that I really don't need to hear, but they make me feel alive. I can hear the " swish " sound when the cars pass by. I can hear the breeze that's coming out from the vent, and it's very easy for anyone with hearing to filter it out. I can hear the " buzz " sound from the fluorescent light. I can hear person's breathing and my clothes moving. I can also hear rhythm of the blood pressure. I can hear mechanical sounds like water pump or washing machine in a room that's about 35 feet away. Those sounds were not expected at all! --Mekutochi Left Ear -- Cochlear Nucleus Freedom Implanted: August 15, 2005 Activated: August 23, 2005 Right Ear -- Pending --------------------------------- Blab-away for as little as 1¢/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using Messenger with Voice. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 12, 2006 Report Share Posted April 12, 2006 > > Hi Dr. Yell Inverso, > > Glad to help, and please let me know if you have any questions or comments. > > 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds that you most felt you needed to hear? > > I had enlarged vestibular canals since I was about three years old, so my hearing declined over time. I'm currently at age 31 years. I've worn analog and digital hearing aids the whole time, and heard many environmental sounds (i.e., siren, engine, wind, dog barking, music, telephone, doorbell, TV, et cetera). I apparently took them for granted. I couldn't hear the birds chirping, airplanes in the air, et cetera. > > 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- > linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental sounds and music) would be available to you? > > I expected to be able to hear the musical equipments (i.e., flutes, piano, saxophone, etc), animal callings (bird chirping and cawing, dog panting, cat meowing, etc), nature calling (i.e., thunder, breeze, etc), mechanical sounds (computer, air conditioner, etc) > > > 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and recognize these types of sounds? > > Believe it or not, my current audiogram reveals that my CI hearing level is now at 10 dB that is above the speech banana! That is absolutely amazing for me! I heard many more environmental sounds that I really don't need to hear, but they make me feel alive. I can hear the " swish " sound when the cars pass by. I can hear the breeze that's coming out from the vent, and it's very easy for anyone with hearing to filter it out. I can hear the " buzz " sound from the fluorescent light. I can hear person's breathing and my clothes moving. I can also hear rhythm of the blood pressure. I can hear mechanical sounds like water pump or washing machine in a room that's about 35 feet away. Those sounds were not expected at all! > > > --Mekutochi > > Left Ear -- Cochlear Nucleus Freedom > Implanted: August 15, 2005 > Activated: August 23, 2005 > > Right Ear -- Pending > > --------------------------------- > Blab-away for as little as 1¢/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using Messenger with Voice. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 12, 2006 Report Share Posted April 12, 2006 Hi Dr. Yell Inverso, I am confused. I don't see your response anywhere on my post. Was it an accident that you sent a blank post along with my responses? Kent " dr.inverso " <dr.inverso@...> wrote: > > Hi Dr. Yell Inverso, > > Glad to help, and please let me know if you have any questions or comments. > > 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds that you most felt you needed to hear? > > I had enlarged vestibular canals since I was about three years old, so my hearing declined over time. I'm currently at age 31 years. I've worn analog and digital hearing aids the whole time, and heard many environmental sounds (i.e., siren, engine, wind, dog barking, music, telephone, doorbell, TV, et cetera). I apparently took them for granted. I couldn't hear the birds chirping, airplanes in the air, et cetera. > > 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- > linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental sounds and music) would be available to you? > > I expected to be able to hear the musical equipments (i.e., flutes, piano, saxophone, etc), animal callings (bird chirping and cawing, dog panting, cat meowing, etc), nature calling (i.e., thunder, breeze, etc), mechanical sounds (computer, air conditioner, etc) > > > 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and recognize these types of sounds? > > Believe it or not, my current audiogram reveals that my CI hearing level is now at 10 dB that is above the speech banana! That is absolutely amazing for me! I heard many more environmental sounds that I really don't need to hear, but they make me feel alive. I can hear the " swish " sound when the cars pass by. I can hear the breeze that's coming out from the vent, and it's very easy for anyone with hearing to filter it out. I can hear the " buzz " sound from the fluorescent light. I can hear person's breathing and my clothes moving. I can also hear rhythm of the blood pressure. I can hear mechanical sounds like water pump or washing machine in a room that's about 35 feet away. Those sounds were not expected at all! > > > --Mekutochi > > Left Ear -- Cochlear Nucleus Freedom > Implanted: August 15, 2005 > Activated: August 23, 2005 > > Right Ear -- Pending > > --------------------------------- > Blab-away for as little as 1¢/min. Make PC-to-Phone Calls using Messenger with Voice. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 12, 2006 Report Share Posted April 12, 2006 Yell, You're welcome, no problem. Music sounds better as time goes on, especially familiar music. My husband is a church musician. He plays several instruments, but most usually the flute, at church. Before the CI, I couldn't even hear the flute, at all. Now, I can hear it fine, and follow all the music at church. Electronic music isn't as clear as 'real time' music. The radio has it's ups and downs, depending on how well I know the music I'm listening to. I'm happy to have any music benefit at all, actually. I didn't anticipate as big a music benefit as I've gotten. My main goal was speech discrimination, and music was a hope, so I'm happy with what I've gotten, and, as I mentioned, it is improving over time. It's better now than it was a year ago when I was first activated. Binns ----Original Message Follows---- From: " dr.inverso " <dr.inverso@...> Reply- Subject: Re: Non-Linguistic (Engvironmental) sound recognition with CI Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 01:34:25 -0000 , Thank you for your response. I really appreciate your help. How does music sound to you, do you feel as though you hear and appreciate music as well as you had anticipated you would? Thanks Dr. Inverso, pleaes, call me Yell > > Hello Dr. Inverso; > I'd be happy to answer your questions. I'm late deafened, began losing my > hearing at age 38 (I'm 51 now). > > 1) I don't know that I 'needed' to hear environmental sounds, as much as > missed them, and wanted to hear them. Birds, rain, thunder would be my top > picks. After them comes 'everything else'. I want, and expect to hear most > everything. I want to hear everything hearing people hear. > > 2) I had absolute expectation that I would hear environmental sounds, as > well as speech, and that they would be more easily heard and identified than > speech. > > 3) Since my implant, 1 year ago, I can certainly hear and identify most > environmental sounds. Actually it's amusing that if I don't recognize a > sound, once I have identified it, I don't forget it again. > > Hope this helps! Good luck on your dissertation! > > Binns > > ----Original Message Follows---- > From: " dr.inverso " <dr.inverso@...> > Reply- > > Subject: Non-Linguistic (Engvironmental) sound recognition with CI > Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 00:25:08 -0000 > > Hello there, > > My name is Yell Inverso, and I am an audiologist and researcher who > has worked with both pre and postlingually deafened CI users for > years. For my Ph.D. dissertation I am looking into how adult implant > users feel about environmental or non-linguisic sounds. I have a few > questions that I would like to ask, would anyone be willing to answer > these questions for me? My eventual goal is to help the implant > companies make these types of sounds, including music, sound better > with implant processing. > > Here are the specific questions I had: > 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds > that you most felt you needed to hear? > > 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- > linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental > sounds and music) would be available to you? > > 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and > recognize these types of sounds? > > Thank you so much in advance for taking the time to answer these > questions. If anyone has any specific questions for me (or if you > care to send your responses or personal stories to me in an email), > you can email me directly at dr.inverso@... > > Thank you in advance for your time and consideration, > > Dr. Yell Inverso > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2006 Report Share Posted April 26, 2006 Dr. Inverso, I was happily suprised to see your posting. I have a cochlear implant, I was implanted about 3 years ago. Before I had my surgery I had expected that I would hear environmental sounds really easily. My audiologist was very clear that she could not promise me perfect speech understanding, but she said that i would be more aware of sounds and that it would help me to hear if my grandaughter was crying upstairs etc. What is funny is that I do pretty well with speech, especially if there is not too much background noise. After my implant I was really pleased at first, I could hear all sorts of things, but it took a little while for me to realize that I was not always hearing what I THOUGHT I was hearing. Somtimes I thought my phone was ringing, and when I went to answer the phone there was no one there, I learned later that what I thought was my phone, was actually something else, like my doorbell or a cooking timer. At first I thought that these sounds were just new to me after a long time of not hearing them, I figured they would come later. Unfortunatly though some of them are still hard to distinguish. Music is not good at all for me. I have spoken to other people with implants and a few of them have said they like it, but for me it sounds like garbage. I am unable to pick up the different instruments and I find I cannot appreciate it at all. I have learned through training to attach meaning to some of the sounds I hear, but they do not sound like the actual memory I have of that sound. As for the sounds that I would like to hear clearly: Crying, alarms (smoke alarms, sirens, alarm clocks), telephone ringing, my pets (I have two cats, a dog, and a bird), I really miss listening to birds singing. When I am outside I have difficulty hearing the difference between a car horn and certain sirens. I hope that this is helpful for you. Do you mind if I ask why you wanted to know? Sincerely, Barbara S. > > Hello there, > > My name is Yell Inverso, and I am an audiologist and researcher who > has worked with both pre and postlingually deafened CI users for > years. For my Ph.D. dissertation I am looking into how adult implant > users feel about environmental or non-linguisic sounds. I have a few > questions that I would like to ask, would anyone be willing to answer > these questions for me? My eventual goal is to help the implant > companies make these types of sounds, including music, sound better > with implant processing. > > Here are the specific questions I had: > 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds > that you most felt you needed to hear? > > 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- > linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental > sounds and music) would be available to you? > > 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and > recognize these types of sounds? > > Thank you so much in advance for taking the time to answer these > questions. If anyone has any specific questions for me (or if you > care to send your responses or personal stories to me in an email), > you can email me directly at dr.inverso@... > > Thank you in advance for your time and consideration, > > Dr. Yell Inverso > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 11, 2006 Report Share Posted May 11, 2006 Thank you Dale for your help Dr. Inverso Hello there, > > My name is Yell Inverso, and I am an audiologist and researcher who > has worked with both pre and postlingually deafened CI users for > years. For my Ph.D. dissertation I am looking into how adult implant > users feel about environmental or non-linguisic sounds. I have a few > questions that I would like to ask, would anyone be willing to answer > these questions for me? My eventual goal is to help the implant > companies make these types of sounds, including music, sound better > with implant processing. > > Here are the specific questions I had: > 1. Before you got your implant, what were the environmental sounds > that you most felt you needed to hear? > > 2. Did you have the expectation that post-implantation non- > linguistic sounds (any sounds that are not speech, i.e. environmental > sounds and music) would be available to you? > > 3. Since your implant activation do you feel that you can hear and > recognize these types of sounds? > > Thank you so much in advance for taking the time to answer these > questions. If anyone has any specific questions for me (or if you > care to send your responses or personal stories to me in an email), > you can email me directly at dr.inverso@... > > Thank you in advance for your time and consideration, > > Dr. Yell Inverso > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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