J Am Acad Audiol 2013; 24(10): 969-979
DOI: 10.3766/jaaa.24.10.8
Articles
American Academy of Audiology. All rights reserved. (2013) American Academy of Audiology

Reliability Measure of a Clinical Test: Appreciation of Music in Cochlear Implantees (AMICI)

Min-Yu Cheng
,
Jaclyn B. Spitzer
,
Valeriy Shafiro
,
Stanley Sheft
,
Dean Mancuso
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
06 August 2020 (online)

Purpose: The goals of this study were (1) to investigate the reliability of a clinical music perception test, Appreciation of Music in Cochlear Implantees (AMICI), and (2) examine associations between the perception of music and speech. AMICI was developed as a clinical instrument for assessing music perception in persons with cochlear implants (CIs). The test consists of four subtests: (1) music versus environmental noise discrimination, (2) musical instrument identification (closed-set), (3) musical style identification (closed-set), and (4) identification of musical pieces (open-set). To be clinically useful, it is crucial for AMICI to demonstrate high test-retest reliability, so that CI users can be assessed and retested after changes in maps or programming strategies.

Research Design: Thirteen CI subjects were tested with AMICI for the initial visit and retested again 10–14 days later. Two speech perception tests (consonant-nucleus-consonant [CNC] and Bamford-Kowal-Bench Speech-in-Noise [BKB-SIN]) were also administered.

Data Analysis: Test-retest reliability and equivalence of the test's three forms were analyzed using paired t-tests and correlation coefficients, respectively. Correlation analysis was also conducted between results from the music and speech perception tests.

Results: Results showed no significant difference between test and retest (p > 0.05) with adequate power (0.9) as well as high correlations between the three forms (Forms A and B, r = 0.91; Forms A and C, r = 0.91; Forms B and C, r = 0.95). Correlation analysis showed high correlation between AMICI and BKB-SIN (r = −0.71), and moderate correlation between AMICI and CNC (r = 0.4).

Conclusions: The study showed AMICI is highly reliable for assessing musical perception in CI users.