Patient-Oriented Research to Optimize Cochlear Implant Outcomes
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Summary
The rationale is that only through understanding how individual Cochlear Implant (CI) patients respond to interventions investigators further develop precision-medicine approaches to optimize outcomes. In the proposed research study to investigate the hypotheses, investigators will address two Specific Aims: Specific Aim #1: Define the auditory (bottom-up), cognitive-linguistic (top-down), and functional neuroimaging profiles of adult CI users. Investigators will enroll experienced CI users (\> 6 months of CI use). Specific Aim #2: Determine the feasibility of "auditory" (bottom-up) and "cognitive" (top-down) interventions to improve speech processing in adult CI users. The main hypothesis is that the two interventions are feasible. Investigators also hypothesize that our study protocol will detect the variance in auditory processing profiles and that investigators will show promise in improving both speech processing (using speech recognition and Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) responses)) and real-world functioning (using patient-reported measures), compared with no intervention. Additional hypotheses to be explored are that baseline profile (as defined in Aim #1) will impact the magnitude of participants' responses to the interventions, as will order of interventions (Auditory-Cognitive vs. Cognitive-Auditory, AC vs CA).
Description
Specific Aim 1: Along with collection of demographic/audiologic and datalogging variables, participants will be tested for auditory spectro-temporal resolution and cognitive-linguistic functions. Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) will be collected, reflecting cortical responses to speech. Using cluster analyses, investigators will test the hypothesis that different profiles exist, with different CI users demonstrating different patterns of bottom-up processing, top-down processing, or both. Patient-reported outcomes of CI-related quality of life, communication, and satisfaction wi…