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GECCO
2005
Springer

Using an interactive evolutionary algorithm to help fitting a cochlear implant

14 years 5 months ago
Using an interactive evolutionary algorithm to help fitting a cochlear implant
Cochlear implants are electronic devices that stimulate directly the auditory nerve to allow totally deaf patients to hear again. This paper presents an interactive evolutionary algorithm (IEA) designed to help finding the best parameters of a cochlear implant for a specific patient. If early cochlear implants only featured one electrode, modern devices now offer up to 22 electrodes, with the hope to be able to transmit more details and help the patient hear better. The work presented in this paper shows however that having more electrodes is not necessarily better. Tests on a patient show surprisingly that some combinations of electrodes yield better results than others, with the problem that there is no real way to determine which electrode is beneficial to speech understanding and which is not. The best result obtained by the patient on a speech understanding evaluation protocol was 48.5/100 after 10 years of fitting sessions by an expert practitioner. For many reasons explain...
Claire Bourgeois-République, Bruno Frachet,
Added 27 Jun 2010
Updated 27 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2005
Where GECCO
Authors Claire Bourgeois-République, Bruno Frachet, Pierre Collet
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