With the festive season in full swing, music will fill the air as people come together over the holidays. Music does more than just make us happy! Musical activities can help you improve speech perception. Find out what Dr. Ritva Torppa suggests for activities you can do at home.

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Music plays an important role in our lives – it brings us joy, it allows us to express ourselves and it brings people together. For many people, reconnecting with music after receiving a hearing implant can be life changing.

“Whether it’s singing or dancing or listening, music is everything to me,” says Romy, a cochlear implant recipient. “I’m so relieved I can finally hear music again,” she says of her experience with an implant.

It turns out that music does more than just make us happy, says Dr. Ritva Torppa (PhD).  A speech therapist and researcher from the University of Helsinki in Finland, Dr. Torppa shares tips and advice in our latest release of new content for Cochlear™ CoPilot.

Dr Ritva Torppa talks about how music can improve speech perception for cochlear implant recipients.

Cochlear CoPilot is our mobile app to help you build your listening confidence and live with hearing loss in the real world. The app features articles by clinical experts and recipients on a range of topics – from listening in noise and managing listening fatigue to reconnecting with music. In addition to Dr. Torppa’s suggestions, implant recipients can practice listening to music with games in Bring Back the Beat, another app from Cochlear.

A video of Dr. Torppa’s lecture “Three ways to use music to help improve speech and language if you have a Cochlear™ implant” is available in CoPilot!

“In our recent review article1, we found that in several studies, music intervention improved music perception of CI users, speech perception in silence and noise of CI users and also language learning of CI users,” she said speaking at a Cochlear Family event in Europe for recipients.

“We also found evidence that music intervention improves the brain structures related to speech perception2 3 4 5.”

An image of the CoPilot app showing how music can improve speech perception for cochlear implant recipients.

How to get started

So, what musical activities should you focus on and how can you get started?

Dr. Torppa says playing any musical instrument can help whether it’s piano, guitar or violin and so on.

When listening to music, one of her top tips is to start simple. For example, start by listening to your favorite music – initially with just one instrument.

“Then increase the difficulty little by little by adding musical instruments to the background,” she says.

Singing can also help. When you play a musical instrument, sing along and ask a family member or a friend to tell you when you have hit the right pitch.

Whether you’re listening or playing music for the love of it or to improve speech perception, take a moment to enjoy the experience, like Daniel: “For most of my life, I haven’t been able to hear the high notes of a piano. Now I can and that makes me very happy.”

To find out more about how you can reconnect with music and use Cochlear technology to stream to your sound processor, download Cochlear™ CoPilot.

Along with expert advice, you will find:

  • A guide to apps that allow you to sing along to song lyrics
  • Tips to make your own music play lists
  • Advice from others about what steps to take to reconnect with music
  • The role of community singing groups and dancing
  • Music challenges and much more.

Download Cochlear CoPilot today for free from the Apple6 App store.7

  1. Torppa, R., & Huotilainen, M. (2019). Why and how music can be used to rehabilitate and develop speech and language skills in hearing-impaired children. Hearing Research, 380, 108-122.
  2. Torppa, R., & Huotilainen, M. (2019). Why and how music can be used to rehabilitate and develop speech and language skills in hearing-impaired children. Hearing Research, 380, 108-122.
  3. Hyde, K.L., Lerch, J., Norton, A., Forgeard, M., Winner, E., Evans, A.C., Schlaug, G., 2009. Musical training shapes structural brain development. J. Neurosci. 29, 3019e3025. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5118-08.2009.
  4. Torppa, R., Huotilainen, M., Leminen, M., Lipsanen, J., & Tervaniemi, M. (2014). Interplay between singing and cortical processing of music: a longitudinal study in children with cochlear implants. Frontiers in Psychology, 5, 1389.
  5. Siponkoski, S-T., et al. (2020). Music Therapy Enhances Executive Functions and Prefrontal Structural Neuroplasticity after Traumatic Brain Injury: Evidence from a Randomized Controlled Trial. JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA 37:618–634 org/10.1080/09602011.2021.1890138
  6. Apple, the Apple logo, Apple Watch, FaceTime, Made for iPad logo, Made for iPhone logo, Made for iPod logo, iPhone, iPad Pro, iPad Air, iPad mini, iPad and iPod touch are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries.
  7. To confirm compatibility with your iPhone model go to https://www.cochlear.com/compatibility.
Anna Martinez
Anna Martinez is the Associate Volunteer Engagement Manager and has worked for Cochlear since 2016. She is responsible for communication and onboarding with the Cochlear volunteer community. Anna is a Colorado native and enjoys being outside in the beautiful weather with her son.