image: An illustration of a cochlear implant from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders at the National Institutes of Health.
Credit: Credit: NIH License information: This image is a work of the National Institutes of Health, part of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, taken or made as part of an employee’s official duties. As a work of the U.S. federal government, the image is in the public domain. (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cochlear_implant.jpg)
WASHINGTON, Oct. 14, 2025 – More than a million people around the world rely on cochlear implants (CIs) to hear. CI effectiveness is generally evaluated through speech recognition tests, and despite how widespread they are, CI sound quality is typically not considered an indicator of users’ quality of life.
In JASA Express Letters, published on behalf of the Acoustical Society of America by AIP Publishing, researchers from Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Ohio State University evaluated the relationships between sound quality, speech recognition, and quality-of-life outcomes for CI users.
Hearing-related quality of life encompasses the impact of auditory abilities, communication, social participation, emotional well-being, and daily activities.
“For someone with normal hearing, imagine trying to have a conversation while listening through an old radio, but you’re not quite on the right channel frequency and there’s poor reception,” said author Katelyn Berg.
This is what the world sounds like with a poor-quality CI. A speaker’s voice can seem robotic or tinny, and music lacks richness. This can be due to a variety of technological constraints in the CIs, like channel interactions between electrodes or other acoustic fidelity issues.
The researchers found CI sound quality leads to a 32% variance in users’ quality of life — in contrast, speech recognition has virtually no predictive power over quality of life. In their study, speech recognition only correlated with sound quality under noisy conditions, suggesting it is particularly relevant in situations with background noise and different sound sources — in other words, the real world.
“This challenges decades of clinical practice focused primarily on using speech understanding in quiet as the primary metric for cochlear implant success,” said Berg.
Forty-one CI users ranging in age from 18 to 80 participated in the study. They completed a set of computerized speech recognition tests, and answered two questionnaires — the Speech, Spatial and Qualities (SSQ) questionnaire, and the Cochlear Implant Quality of Life (CIQOL) questionnaire, both validated assessment tools within the audiological field. Part of the SSQ evaluates perceived sound quality, ability to segregate sounds, and listening effort. CIQOL measures quality of life across six domains: communication, emotional, entertainment, environment, listening effort, and social functioning.
The group plans to study the differences in quality of different types of sound, particularly speech and music, and to optimize how the device is programmed based on the placement of the electrode array. They emphasize the implications of this work on moving beyond quiet CI testing environments.
“While speech recognition testing remains important, incorporating sound quality measures could provide a more complete picture of cochlear implant outcomes and guide more targeted interventions for the challenging listening situations patients actually need to navigate in their daily lives,” said Berg.
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The article “Sound quality, not speech recognition, explains cochlear implant-related quality of life outcomes” is authored by Katelyn A. Berg, Hugh M. Birky, Victoria A. Sevich, Aaron C. Moberly, and Terrin N. Tamati. It will appear in JASA Express Letters on Oct. 14, 2025 (DOI: 10.1121/10.0039069). After that date, it can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0039069.
ABOUT THE JOURNAL
JASA Express Letters is a gold open-access journal devoted to the rapid and open dissemination of important new research results and technical discussion in all fields of acoustics. It serves physical scientists, life scientists, engineers, psychologists, physiologists, architects, musicians, and speech communication specialists who wish to quickly report the results of their acoustical research in letter-sized contributions. See https://pubs.aip.org/asa/jel.
ABOUT THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
The Acoustical Society of America (ASA) is the premier international scientific society in acoustics devoted to the science and technology of sound. Its 7,000 members worldwide represent a broad spectrum of the study of acoustics. ASA publications include The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (the world’s leading journal on acoustics), JASA Express Letters, Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics, Acoustics Today magazine, books, and standards on acoustics. The society also holds two major scientific meetings each year. See https://acousticalsociety.org/.
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Journal
JASA Express Letters
Article Title
Sound quality, not speech recognition, explains cochlear implant-related quality of life outcomes
Article Publication Date
14-Oct-2025