Read I Can Hear You Whisper Online
Authors: Lydia Denworth
Note: The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. To find the corresponding locations in the text of this digital version, please use the “search” function on your e-reader. Note that not all terms may be searchable. Page numbers in italics refer to illustrations.
Ackerman, Diane, 25
acoustic cues used by children, 46
acoustic glimpse, 206
acoustic-phonetic speech codes, 240
ACT admissions test, 325â26
activism, deaf
emergence of, 114â16
Gallaudet protests, 116â19,
186â89
Gallaudet University protests,
116â19, 186â89, 227, 322, 325
Lexington protests, 177â78
Advanced Bionics, 157â58
age of onset of deafness, 18
air conduction, 30
Alexander Graham Bell Association (AG Bell), 18, 224, 286, 333
alliteration, 277
alphabetic languages and alphabetic principle, 268â70
Alzheimer's patients, 126
American Asylum (later American School for the Deaf), 60, 63
American Sign Language (ASL)
appreciation for, 21
classes in, 321â22
cognitive benefits of, 293â94
and Deaf culture, 18, 288â94, 318â20, 321, 323, 326, 330â32, 333
dictionary of, 113
early roots of, 60
and education policy, 228
grammar of, 288â89, 321
linguistics of, 288â90
and Marschark, 230â31
morphological processes, 287â88
number of users, 290â91
parenting with, 21
and reading, 278â82
and spoken language acquisition, 15
tutors for, 284â85
American Society for Deaf Children, 281
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 178â79, 227â28
Amman, Johann Conrad, 55â56
anatomy of the ear, 25â27
Anderson, Natasha, 310
animal world, 42
anvil (incus), 26
architecture for the deaf, 322
Aristotle, 52
Arnold, Harold, 69, 70
articulatory-based speech codes, 240
AT&T, 69â70
The Atlantic Monthly, 177
attention
and classroom environment, 256â58
and neuroplasticity, 247â51,
254â56
and sign language, 295
audiograms, 14, 29, 30, 32, 85
audiologists, 24
audiometer, 73
audition and neuroplasticity, 250
auditory brainstem response (ABR) test, 30â31
auditory cortex, 128, 135, 137, 198, 240
auditory-motor interface, 240
auditory nerve, 27, 127
auditory shadowing, 275
Australian cochlear implants, 217, 302
“autosomal recessive” gene, 86
Ayers, John, 297, 303â4
AzBio sentences, 304â5
baby sign language, 21
Bakke, Matthew, 330â32
balance, 31
Bancroft, Anne, 110
basilar membrane
anatomy of, 26â27
Békésy's research on, 76â77
and frequencies, 26, 29â30, 31, 101, 128
and hearing evaluations, 29
and hearing loss, 31
implant compared to, 203
role of, 26
Bavelier, Daphne, 232
Bedouin communities, 289
bedtime stories, 277â78
Beethoven's Nightmare, 310â11
Beginnings, 319
Begley, Sharon, 124, 135
behaviorism, 35
Békésy, Georg von, 75â77, 106
Békésy's traveling wave, 76â77
Bell, Alexander Graham, 27, 56â57, 61â65, 196
Bell Telephone Laboratories, 69â75, 77, 100, 154â55
Bellugi, Ursula, 287, 289
Benedict, Beth, 281
Berkeley Carroll school, 212â13, 216, 307â10
Bialystok, Ellen, 291, 293â94
biculturalism, 328
Biderman, Beverly, 308, 312
“bilaterals” (double cochlear implant users), 303â6
Bilger, Robert, 106â7, 150
bilingualism
advantages of, 291â94, 333
and age of language acquisition, 251â54
bilingual-bicultural approach, 229, 328
challenges associated with, 279
ineffectiveness of, 231
bimodal hearing, 170â71, 303â6, 310, 338
Bionics Institute (Bionic Ear
Institute), 309
birds, 42â43, 48
Blamey, Peter, 309
Bloomberg, Michael, 291
Bloomfield, Leonard, 34
Boemio, Teresa, 214
bone conduction, 30
bones of the ears, 26
Bonet, Juan Pablo, 54, 56
Bories, Ellen, 153â54
Bortfeld, Heather, 282
bottom-up processing, 200
Brackmann, Derald, 155
Bradley, Ed, 181â82
Bradley, Lynette, 277
Bragg, Bernard, 110, 111
Braidwood family, 59â60
braille, 273
brain, 236â46
capacity to learn, 124
compensatory changes in, 133â37
critical periods in development of, 131â33, 153, 248
deprivation of, 130â33
division of labor, 126â28, 239
effect of deafness on, 133â37, 139
hemispheres of, 252, 271
and language, 236â46,
240
, 251â54
language processing model, 236â41
maturation of, 123â26
neural pruning in, 138
neuroimaging technology, 190â96
neurological models of hearing, 241â46
neurons of, 124, 126, 197
and reading, 271, 274â75
sensitive periods of, 131â33, 137â39
simulation vs. deprivation of, 128â29
See also
plasticity of the brain
brain stem, 127
Broca's area, 236â38
Bruce, Robert, 63
Bryant, Peter, 277
Cajal, Santiago Ramón y, 131
California, 270â71
Camus, Albert, 334
Canlon, Barbara, 77
Casterline, Dorothy, 112, 113
categories of hearing loss, 17
The Cat in the Hat (Dr. Seuss), 246
causes of hearing loss, 85â88
Center for Hearing and Communication, 176, 286
Center for Reading and Language Research, 268
central auditory system, 126â28, 127
Central Institute for the Deaf, 225â26
Charlotte's Web (White), 271
children
brain maturation of, 123â26
capacity to learn, 124
cues used by, 46â48
Deaf community on implantation of, 158, 179â83, 328
earliest implant recipients, 175â77, 181â83
ethical considerations regarding implants, 174â75
FDA approval of implants for, 158, 176, 179, 183
language acquisition of, 34â35, 37â39
milestones in, 6â7, 31
multilingualism of, 45â46
native language of, 45â46
original language generation of, 42
and parents' vocabulary, 39â41
preference for speech, 45
and reading skills, 277â78
researchers' interest in, 173â74, 175
and sensitive periods for hearing and brain development, 137â39
and sign language, 47
and speech perception, 43â45
Children of a Lesser God (1987), 116, 321
children of deaf adults (CODAs), 114â15
Chomsky, Noam, 34â35
Christiansen, John, 328
civil rights movement. See activism, deaf
Clark, Graeme
background of, 141â43
and Cochlear Corporation, 157,
160, 176
development of implant, 140â41, 143â44
first recipients of implants, 144â50
and pediatric patients, 173â74, 175
speech processing program of, 147â48, 204
Clarke, John, 61
Clarke School, 61, 82â85, 122,
210â13, 286
class divisions and language acquisition, 39â41
classical music, 308
classroom environments, 255. See also education
Clerc, Laurent, 60
cochlea
anatomy of, 26â27
and auditory nerve, 127
Békésy's research on, 76â77
and electrode placement, 220â21
in Mondini dysplasia/deformity, 87
role of, 26
Cochlear Corporation, 157, 160, 176. See also Clark, Graeme
Cochlear Implant Lab, 297
cochlear implants, 161
activation of, 166â69
and age of recipients, 225
and Alex's hearing loss, 209, 260, 264, 285â86
ASL sign for, 180
and attention, 258
Australian device, 142â50, 160, 302
barriers to the market, 156â57
Bilger report on, 106â7, 175
and brain physiology, 338â39
and brain processing of sound, 194â95
candidacy requirements, 303
for children, 173â74, 175â77,
179â84, 319
clinical trials for, 222
and the “cocktail party problem,” 297â99, 301â6
and cognition and education, 229â35
and continuous interleaved sampling (CIS), 217â18
contrasted with natural hearing, 218â22
controversy surrounding, 16â17, 22â23
credit for invention of, 93, 157
current practices, 278â79
Deaf community's reaction to, 158, 179â81, 182â84, 318â20, 326â29, 331â33
and degraded hearing conditions, 203
description of device, 160â61,
161
earliest implant recipients, 184
early theory of, 94â95
and electrode placement, 220â21
Eyriès and Djourno's early progress on, 92â93
FDA approval of, 157, 158, 176, 179, 183
and frequency, 101
and hearing aids (bimodal hearing), 170â71, 303â6, 310, 338
House's device, 97â98, 105â7
House's pioneering role in, 89â90
implanting of device, 159â62, 167
and language development, 212â16, 224â25, 244
and lipreading, 107
manufacturing of, 157
and meningitis risks, 183â84
Michelson's device, 106â7
multichannel implants, 106â7, 140, 155â56, 175, 177
and music, 307â10, 312â13
National Association of the Deaf's position on, 22â23, 182â83, 319
and pitch perception, 100, 101
and reading, 279
San Francisco device, 150â55, 157â58
and sensitive periods for hearing and brain development, 137â39
and sign language, 285
Simmons' device, 99â100, 140
single-channel implants, 97â98, 105â8, 140, 153â54, 155, 157
and speech perception, 106â8
and spoken language, 241, 260, 280â82
success of, 157
and support networks, 336â38
and Swiller, 283
Utah device, 155â56, 158
varied results with, 222â29
cochlear nuclei, 127â28, 198
“cocktail party problem,”
297â99, 301â6
code-cracking capacity, 271
cognitive function, 232
cognitive research and bilingualism, 293
Cogswell, Alice, 59
Cogswell, Mason Fitch, 59
Cohen, Noel, 176
Cole, Janis, 321â22, 332â34
Columbia Institution for the Instruction of the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind, 60, 61
compensatory changes in the brain, 133â37
computations in the brain, 201
concentration, 247. See also attention
congenital hearing loss, 85â86
connexin 26 (autosomal recessive gene), 86
consonants, 72, 81
Contact (1997), 205
continuous interleaved sampling (CIS), 202, 217â18, 301, 306
Cook, Sarah, 297, 303â4, 305
cortical auditory evoked potential (CAEP), 137â38
cortical glimpse, 206
critical bandwidth concept, 154
critical periods in brain development, 131â33, 153, 248
Croneberg, Carl, 112, 113
CT (computed tomography)
scans, 86â87
Cued Speech, 228â29
cues used by children, 46â48
cultural bias, 331
curricular practices, 271
Dallos, Peter, 77
Davies, Bryn, 175â76
Deaf Cognition (Hauser), 232, 233, 235
Deaf community and culture
and American Sign Language, 288â94, 318â20, 321, 323, 326, 330â32, 333
on children and cochlear implantation, 158, 179â83, 328
and deaf of deaf, 15â16, 110, 233, 234â35, 320
demographics of, 290â91, 319
development of, 114â16
and educational underachievement, 21â22
Gallaudet University protests,
116â19, 186â89, 227, 322, 325
Deaf community and culture (cont.)
leaders of, 227
Lexington protests, 177â78
and oralism, 185â86
reaction to cochlear implants, 158, 179â81, 182â84, 318â20, 326â29, 331â33
rejection of deafness as disability, 116, 177â79
Deaf in America (Padden and Humphries), 115â16
Deaf Liberation Front, 183
Deaf Life magazine, 180â81
Deafness: An Autobiography (Wright), 54
deaf of deaf, 15â16, 110, 233, 234â35, 320
Deaf President Now protests (Gallaudet University), 116â19, 186, 227, 322, 325
Deaf Pride, 289
Deaf Space, 322
deaf vs. Deaf, 18, 115
decibels (dB), 27
Dehaene, Stanislas, 274
dementia, 293
demographics of deaf population, 14, 290â91, 319
dendritic spines, 197
Denworth, Alex
activation of device, 166â69
birthday party, 209
cause of hearing loss, 87â88
decision to implant, 120â23
degree of deafness, 30â31, 120
early concerns about, 3â8, 10â12
education of, 79, 82â85, 210â13
evaluations of, 8â10, 24â25, 28â32, 85â88, 199, 202, 211, 213â15
and family relocation, 335â40
hearing aids of, 78â79, 82, 84, 122, 170â71, 305
identity of, 215â16
language development of, 32, 121, 122, 165â66, 171â72, 244â45, 246
and localizing sounds, 300, 305
and loss of residual hearing, 259â65