Richard Penninger
Professor German Hearing Center of the Hannover Medical School
Polyphonic Pitch Perception for Cochlear Implant Users
“They  gave me back speech but not music” is a sentence commonly heard by CI  subjects. One of the reasons is that in music, multiple streams are  frequently played at the same time, which is an essential feature of  harmony. Current CI speech processors do not allow CI users to perceive  such complex polyphonic sounds. 
Two recent studies will be described  in which the ability of CI users to identify the number of simultaneous  tones was assessed. First seven CI subjects were asked to identify the  number of one single or two simultaneous tones. Stimuli were applied  with a research sound processor thought direct electrical stimulation.  Additionally, ten further CI subjects were asked to identify one, two  and three simultaneous pitches applied on different electrodes using  sinusoidal amplitude modulation. All stimuli were loudness balanced  before the actual identification task.
When tones are presented  optimally through a research sound processor, then CI users are able to  perceive polyphonic tones. If sound processing strategies were to use  concurrent stimulation on multiple or single electrodes, then possibly  polyphonic tones would be better perceived by CI users yielding better  music and language perception.