AB provides informative materials that help you counsel your patients on the process and rewards of getting a cochlear implant.
Downloadable brochures, webinars, and patient and professional literature demonstrate how cochlear implants function and improve quality of life for those affected by severe-to-profound hearing loss.
AB’s literature will help your patients understand the process of getting a cochlear implant, from initial diagnosis to implantation to activation and beyond.
Your patients may also benefit from reviewing AB’s Hear Your World, which illustrates how cochlear implants work and provides information on choosing cochlear implants.
AB’s state-of-the-art cochlear implant technology has been developed to help patients hear all of their world – from the quietest listening environment to the most challenging noisy setting.
AB’s patented microphone placed naturally at the opening of the ear for highly focused hearing while providing wireless connectivity to cell phones, MP3 players, and more.
A feature that automatically adapts the processor to your patients’ surroundings, just like normal-hearing ears. There’s no fumbling with dials, switches, or remote controls to adjust to changing environments.
Designed to deliver five times more spectral resolution (120 spectral bands) than competing sound processors, so you hear more details in speech, music, and more.
Automatically analyzes and adapts to every listening situation you or your child encounters, then separates speech from surrounding noise for improved understanding and comfortable conversing.1,2
Whether your patient is at a dinner party, wedding, or networking event, you’ll want them to easily participate in the lively discussions that take place, rather than struggle to keep up. AB performs best in these challenging situations.
Gifford showed that 11 out of 11 recipients understood more sentences in noise with Harmony’s unique T-Mic™ microphone than with a behind-the-ear (BTE) microphone.3
AB’s unique AutoSound™ technology automatically adapts to changing listening environments so that your patients can easily hear people speaking in everyday settings. All they need to do is set and forget it.
Independent research by Haumann, Buchner, and Lenarz concluded that AB recipients hear more speech in noise and everyday life situations than recipients of other cochlear implant systems.4
AB’s HiRes Fidelty 120™ is designed to deliver the pitch and timing of sound with the greatest accuracy so that your patients can hear and enjoy music or hear well in noise.
Hearing and appreciating music remains one of the biggest challenges for many cochlear implant recipients. AB technology is designed to help your patients enjoy the melodies, harmonies, and rhythms of their favorite songs.
In a multicenter study, researchers demonstrated that AB recipients listen to music more frequently and enjoy the music-listening experience more than recipients of other cochlear implant systems.5,6
Schramm D, Pickard E, Beauregard Y, Moran L. Evaluation of the ClearVoice Strategy in Children using HiResolution Fidelity 120 Sound Processing. Poster Presentation at the 11th International Conference on Cochlear Implants and Other Implantable Auditory Technologies, Stockholm, SE. June 30-July 3, 2010.
Advanced Bionics. (2012) ClearVoice Clinical Results White Paper.
Gifford R, Revit L. (2010) Speech perception for adult cochlear implant recipients in a realistic background noise: effectiveness of preprocessing strategies and external options for improving speech recognition in noise. Journal of the American Academy of Audiology 21:441-451.
Haumann S, Buchner A, Lenarz Th. Does the Input Dynamic Range of Cochlear Implant Processors Influence Speech Perception in Adverse Listening Situations? Oral Presentation at the 10th International Conference on Cochlear Implant and Other Implantable Auditory Technologies, San Diego, CA. April 10-12, 2008.
Quick A, Koch DB, Osberger MJ. HiResolution with Fidelity 120 Sound Processing: Listening Benefits in CII and HiRes 90K Implant Users. Poster Presentation at the Conference on Implantable Auditory Prostheses, July 15-20, 2007, Lake Tahoe, CA.
Mirza S, Douglas SA, Lindsey P, Hildreth T, Hawthorne M. 2003. Appreciation of Music in Adult Patients with Cochlear Implants. Cochlear Implants International. 4(2): 85-95.