Graeme Clark Collection

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    The development of the Melbourne/Cochlear multiple-channel cochlear implant for profoundly deaf children
    Clark, Graeme M. ; Busby, Peter A. ; Dowell, Richard C. ; Dawson, Pamella W. ; Pyman, Brian C. ; Webb, Robert L. ; Staller, Steven J. ; Beiter, Anne L. ; Brimacombe, Judith A. ( 1992)
    In 1978-79, a speech processing strategy which extracted the voicing (FO) and second formant (F2) frequencies and presented these as rate and place of stimulation respectively to residual auditory nerve fibres was developed for the University of Melbourne's prototype multiple-channel receiver-stimulator (Clark et aI1977, Clark et a11978, Tong et aI1980). This speech processing strategy was shown to provide post linguistically deaf adults with some open-set speech comprehension using electrical stimulation alone, and considerable help when used in combination with lipreading (Clark et al 1981).
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    Speech perception, production and language results in a group of children using the 22-electrode cochlear implant
    Blamey, P. J. ; Dawson, P. W. ; Dettman, S. J. ; Rowland, L. C. ; Brown, A. M. ; Busby, P. A. ; Dowell, R. C. ; Rickards, F. W. ; Clark, Graeme M. ( 1992)
    Five children out of a group of nine (aged 5.5 to 19.9 years) implanted with the 22-electrode cochlear implant (Cochlear Ply. Ltd.) have achieved substantial scores on open-set speech tests using hearing without lipreading. Phoneme scores for monosyllabic words ranged from 40% to 72%. Word scores in sentences ranged from 26% to 74%. Four of these five children were implanted during preadolescence. The fifth child, who had a progressive loss and was implanted during adolescence after a short period of very profound deafness, scored highest on all speech perception tests. The remaining four children who did not demonstrate open-set recognition were implanted during adolescence after a long duration of profound deafness. Post-operative performance on closed-set speech perception tests was better than pre-operative performance for all children. Improvements in speech and language assessments were also noted. These improvements tended to be greater for the younger children. The results are discussed with reference to variables which may contribute to successful implant use: such as age at onset, duration of profound hearing loss, age at implantation, aetiology, educational program, and the type of training provided.
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    Paediatric cochlear implantation: radiologic observations of skull growth
    XU, JIN ; Shepherd, Robert K. ; Xu, Shi-Ang ; Seldon, H. Lee ; Clark, Graeme M. ( 1993)
    We investigated the effects of long-term implantation of auditory prostheses on skull growth in young animals. Four monkeys were implanted with dummy cochlear implants at 6 months of age. To simulate implantation in children, the bed for the receiver-stimulator or interconnecting plug was drilled across a calvarial suture down to the underlying dura. Plain skull oentgenograms were periodically taken to monitor head growth for up to 3 years after implantation. These longitudinal measurements revealed no significant asymmetric skull growth. Postmortem measurements using computed tomographic scans confirmed these results and showed no significant difference in the intracranial volumes between the implanted and control sides of each animal or between experimental and nonimplanted control monkeys. These results suggest that long-term cochlear implantation in very young children will not cause any significant deformity of the skull.
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    The postnatal growth of the temporal bone and its implications for cochlear implantation in children
    Dahm, Markus C. ; Shepherd, Robert K. ; Clark, Graeme M. ( 1993)
    The postnatal growth of the human temporal bone was examined by direct anatomical measurements on 60 cadaver specimens of all ages. The bones were dissected as one would perform cochlear implant surgery using a posterior tympanotomy approach. Nineteen anatomical /surgical landmarks with implications for cochlear implant surgery were identified on each bone and the distance between these points measured. The temporal hone was found to be a complex structure, phylogenetically, anatomically and functionally consisting of four different parts with independent postnatal development. The inner and middle cars were adult size at birth. The external auditory canal and most parts of the temporal hone were subject to significant lateral growth. The size of the pneumatised mastoid increased in all directions. In the facial recess, however, no postnatal growth was observed. Between birth and adulthood an average of 12 mm (SD 5 mm) of growth was seen directly between the sino-dural angle and the round window, the landmarks approximating the Implantation site for the receiver-stimulator and the electrode entry point into the inner car. However, if an electrode leadwire is fixed at a cortical fixation site such as the posterosuperior point of Macewen's triangle, the leadwire would be subject to approximately 20 mm of growth. These results indicate that a paediatric cochlear implant design incorporating an expandable leadwire to accommodate this growth should allow up to 25 mm of leadwire lengthening. The fossa incudis showed no growth relative to the round window and was found to be a convenient fixation site for the electrode array close to the cochlea. From an anatomical and surgical point of view, cochlear implantation in very young children is feasible, provided the electrode array is secured and the design accommodates for controlled leadwire lengthening.
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    The perception of vowels by hearing impaired children [Abstract]
    Busby, P. A. ; Tong, Y. C. ; Clark, Graeme M. ( 1982)
    This paper reports the results of a series of closed-set vowel identification experiments with four congenitally hearing impaired children (age 13 years) with moderate to profound bilateral sensorineural losses. Material was presented under three test conditions: hearing alone, through currently worn hearing aids; lipreading alone; and hearing plus lipreading. Analysis of the results using multidimensional scaling and hierarchical clustering revealed a strong relationship between the perceptual organisation of the responses and the physical attributes of the method of signal presentation. In the case of acoustic signals, the results indicated a perceptual organisation describable in terms of the duration of the vowel and the relative frequencies of the first and second formant. For visual signals, the perceptual organisation correlated with characteristics of lip-shaping during production. These results indicated that the subjects attempted to use similar perceptual cues as the normally hearing population. The relationship between the perceptual organisation of the acoustic stimuli and the aided audiogram is also discussed.
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    Auditory processing abilities in children using cochlear implants: their relevance to speech perception [Abstract]
    Dawson, Pam W. ; McKay, Colette M. ; Busby, Peter A. ; Grayden, David B. ; Clark, Graeme M. ( 1999)
    This study aimed to investigate the relationships between some basic auditory processing skills, subject variables and speech perception ability in young children using cochlear implants. A modification of the play audiometry procedure was used to measure electrode discrimination and "rate-of-processing" ability in seventeen 4-10 year old children. In the electrode discrimination task, children responded with a game-like motor response when a repeating stimulation on a reference electrode "changed" to a different electrode. In the "rate-of processing" task, children had to respond to the "change" to a different electrode, when the duration of the stimuli and the time interval between the stimuli were decreased. Normally hearing children were assessed on this task with acoustic stimulation. Nonverbal intelligence, speech feature discrimination and closed-set word recognition were also measured in the children using implants.
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    The use of click-ABR and steady state evoked potentials for hearing assessment in young cochlear implant candidates [Abstract]
    Rance, G. ; Dowell, Richard, C. ; Richards, F. W. ; Clark, Graeme M. ( 1997)
    The accurate assessment of hearing thresholds in prospective cochlear implant candidates is essential. As the minimum age of implantation has reduced, audiologists have been faced with the complicated task of obtaining precise audiometric information in children whose immaturity may severely restrict the assessment process. Clearly for these young candidates, there is a place for a reliable, objective measure of residual hearing in the pre-operative test battery. This paper examines the degree of accuracy with which the click-ABR and the steady-state evoked potential (SSEP) techniques can provide estimates of hearing level in subjects with several profound hearing loss.
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    The relationship between aetiology of hearing loss and outcome following cochlear implantation in a paediatric population
    O'Sullivan, P. G. ; Ellul, S. M. ; Dowell, B. C. ; Clark, Graeme M. (Monduzzi Editore, 1997)
    Eighty-eight children who underwent cochlear implantation at the University of Melbourne Cochlear Implant Clinic are reviewed. The aetiology of the hearing loss is classified and is compared to their best level of speech perception performance. The group whose hearing loss was not congenital in origin performed better than those who were congenital in origin. Of those whose hearing loss was congenital in nature those with rubella appeared to perform best.
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    Factors affecting outcomes in children with cochlear implants
    Dowell, R. C. ; Blamey, P. J. ; Clark, Graeme M. (Monduzzi Editore, 1997)
    Open-set speech perception tests were completed for a group of 52 children and adolescents who were long-term users of the Nucleus multiple channel cochlear prosthesis. Results showed mean scores for the group of 32.4% for open-set BKE sentences and 48.1% for phonemes in open-set monosyllabic words. Over 80% of the group performed significantly on these tas1cs. Age at implantation was identified as a significant factor affecting speech perception performance with improved scores for children implanted early. This factor was evident in the results at least down to the age of three years. Duration.. of profound hearing loss, progressive hearing loss, educational program and preoperative residual hearing were also identified as significant factors that may affect speech perception performance.
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    Towards a SSEP hearing screening test for neonates [Abstracts]
    Cone-Wesson, B. ; Parker, J. ; Richards, F. W. ; Ma, E. J. ; Clark, Graeme M. ( 1997)
    Newborn hearing screening tests utilizing evoked otoacoustic emissions (EOAEs) and/or the auditory brainstem response (ABR) recording have been recommended by the NIH(1993). The University of Melbourne experience with steady-state evoked potentials (SSEPs) in newborns suggests that they too, have potential as a screening tool (Rickards et al, 1984). In the present study, SSEPs were recorded from neonates in a pilot study of how the technology may be applied to newborn hearing screening. Eighty-eight neonates were tested using transient-and distortion product EOAEs, ABRs and SSEPs. Only those infants who had TEOAEs, DPOAEs, and ABRs that met a rigid and objective "pass" criteria were included in the study. SSEPs were evoked by amplitude modulated tones using carrier frequencies at 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 HZ, and modulation frequencies between 75 and 95 Hz presented at levels between 40 and 80 dB SPL. Out of 324 individual SSEP tests, 12% were no-stimulus control trials. Phase-coherence statistics were used to determine when a significant or "passing" result had been obtained. Preliminary results show that a 94% pass rate is achieved for a CF of 2 KHZ, presented at 60 dB SPL, but that pass rates are lower (79% to 89%) for 500, 1KHz and 4KHZ CF's at the same stimulus levels. For lower stimulus levels, pass rates do not exceed 80% for any carrier frequency. Phase-coherence estimates were made for 32, 64, ahd 96 samples at each carrier and modulation frequency combination. We will report the phase coherence estimates for each CF, MF and level combination as a function of sample size, in order to suggest a protocol that may be efficient in newborn hearing screening applications.