Institution
Cochlear Limited
Company•Sydney, New South Wales, Australia•
About: Cochlear Limited is a company organization based out in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Cochlear implant & Hearing loss. The organization has 1290 authors who have published 1479 publications receiving 33109 citations. The organization is also known as: кохлеарные Americas & COCHLEAR LIMITED.
Topics: Cochlear implant, Hearing loss, Speech perception, Hearing aid, Implant
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Results from a pilot study suggest that the spatial functions from this ‘advanced’ method may provide a better correlation with results from psychophysical forward masking.
Abstract: The feasibility of using the electrically evoked compound action potential (ECAP), measured with the NRT system (Neural Response Telemetry) and the NRT software (version 2.04), to quantify the longitudinal spread of neural excitation was examined in four subjects fitted with the Nucleus C124M cochlear implant. The ECAP and psychophysical forward-masking profiles were measured using stimulation on each of three electrodes, in basal, middle and apical positions. Spatial spread profiles derived from the ECAP measure produced broader functions than those derived from the psychophysical measure. These results, together with investigation of the change of ECAP spread pattern with stimulation current, suggest that functions derived from this 'simple' method were more influenced by the spread of electric field from excited neuron to electrode array than by breadth of the neural excitation pattern. The recently released NRT version 3.0 permits the masker and probe pulses to be delivered to separate electrodes, thus removing a fundamental limitation of version 2.04. Results from a pilot study, in which this capability was exploited, suggest that the spatial functions from this 'advanced' method may provide a better correlation with results from psychophysical forward masking.
57 citations
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TL;DR: A broad role for Gipc1 in the development of both stereociliary bundles and cell polarization is indicated, and it is suggested that the strong asymmetry of Vangl2 observed in early postnatal cochlear epithelium is mostly a ‘tissue’ polarity readout.
Abstract: Vangl2 is one of the central proteins controlling the establishment of planar cell polarity in multiple tissues of different species. Previous studies suggest that the localization of the Vangl2 protein to specific intracellular microdomains is crucial for its function. However, the molecular mechanisms that control Vangl2 trafficking within a cell are largely unknown. Here, we identify Gipc1 (GAIP C-terminus interacting protein 1) as a new interactor for Vangl2, and we show that a myosin VI-Gipc1 protein complex can regulate Vangl2 traffic in heterologous cells. Furthermore, we show that in the cochlea of MyoVI mutant mice, Vangl2 presence at the membrane is increased, and that a disruption of Gipc1 function in hair cells leads to maturation defects, including defects in hair bundle orientation and integrity. Finally, stimulated emission depletion microscopy and overexpression of GFP-Vangl2 show an enrichment of Vangl2 on the supporting cell side, adjacent to the proximal membrane of hair cells. Altogether, these results indicate a broad role for Gipc1 in the development of both stereociliary bundles and cell polarization, and suggest that the strong asymmetry of Vangl2 observed in early postnatal cochlear epithelium is mostly a 'tissue' polarity readout.
57 citations
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TL;DR: A retrospective cross-sectional analysis of Cochlear Nucleus 6 CI sound-processor data logs found large differences between individuals' auditory diets that might contribute to differences in rehabilitation outcomes.
Abstract: Purpose We describe the natural auditory environment of people with cochlear implants (CIs), how it changes across the life span, and how it varies between individuals. Method We performed a retros...
57 citations
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TL;DR: Results suggest a persistent immaturity and/or abnormal organization in the auditory cortex in some children and may reflect differences in central auditory processing of the electrical input provided after cochlear implant use.
Abstract: Variability in speech perception abilities after years of cochlear implant use could reflect differences in central auditory processing of the electrical input provided. Cortical responses were measured in 23 experienced pediatric cochlear implant users who were 12.3+/-3.1 years of age at testing and had used their implants for 6.0+/-2.9 years. All had prelingual onset of deafness. An observer identified blind three types of cortical waveforms ranging from those similar to previous reports to more atypical responses. Children displaying atypical types of responses were implanted at a wide range of ages and had significantly poorer behavioral speech perception scores (P<0.05) than their peers with expected waveforms. Results suggest a persistent immaturity and/or abnormal organization in the auditory cortex in some children.
57 citations
Authors
Showing all 1293 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Marc Moonen | 66 | 796 | 17837 |
Robert K. Shepherd | 59 | 255 | 10679 |
Matthew W. Kelley | 53 | 141 | 9657 |
Frank R. Lin | 51 | 211 | 12431 |
Peter S. Roland | 47 | 239 | 7660 |
Peter J. Blamey | 47 | 208 | 7316 |
Richard C. Dowell | 46 | 192 | 7104 |
Olivier Sterkers | 46 | 356 | 8162 |
Blake C. Papsin | 46 | 240 | 6712 |
Stephen O'Leary | 45 | 238 | 6841 |
Karl Hörmann | 44 | 379 | 7001 |
Geoffrey A. Manley | 44 | 183 | 6184 |
Karen A. Gordon | 43 | 135 | 4594 |
Hugh J. McDermott | 43 | 146 | 5254 |
David M. Baguley | 43 | 240 | 6533 |