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Journal ArticleDOI

Auditory prostheses research with multiple channel intracochlear stimulation in man.

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TLDR
Results of pitch-matching experiments with the unilaterally deaf volunteer were consistent with tonotopic maps of the cochlea, and experiments indicated that a pitch continuum may be achieved by combining place and periodicity pitch modulation.
Abstract
Although single-channel electrode arrays implanted in the scala tympani of deaf patients are useful as an aid to lip reading and for distinguishing some environmental sounds, they do not transmit intelligible speech. However, multichannel electrode arrays, which take advantage of the cochlea's tonotopic organization, may be capable of generating the complex patterns of neural activity necessary for speech discrimination. In this study, multichannel electrodes were implanted in the cochleas of four volunteers, with access to the connecting wires made through the skin via a percutaneous connector. The major portion of the data presented is from two of these subjects: one has been bilaterally deaf since birth and the other has been unilaterally deaf for 15 years. Preliminary results of experiments with two more recently implanted subjects are described as well as experiments with a fifth volunteer who was implanted with five electrodes by House in 1969. Data on pitch and loudness discrimination as well as the effects of stimulation parameters on threshold, impedance, and electrode interaction are presented. Place pitch and periodicity pitch were observed in all five volunteers. The results of pitch-matching experiments with the unilaterally deaf volunteer were consistent with tonotopic maps of the cochlea, and experiments indicated that a pitch continuum may be achieved by combining place and periodicity pitch modulation. Preliminary experiments in tune recognition with one subject demonstrate his ability to recognize simple melodies based on periodicity pitch cues. These results, coupled with the finding that subjective sensations remain stable over the long-term, support the feasibility of providing artificial hearing with a multichannel cochlear stimulation system.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cochlear Implants: System Design, Integration, and Evaluation

TL;DR: Issues beyond cochlear implants are discussed to address treatment options for the entire spectrum of hearing impairment as well as to use the co chlear implant as a model to design and evaluate other similar neural prostheses such as vestibular and retinal implants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Music Perception with Cochlear Implants: A Review

TL;DR: This paper reviews that research, discusses the published experimental results in terms of both psychophysical observations and device function, and concludes with some practical suggestions about how perception of music might be enhanced for implant recipients in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multichannel electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve in man. I. Basic psychophysics.

TL;DR: Measurements from stimulation of a single channel at a time of cochlear implants indicate a central mechanism that is still intact in implant patients, and the shape of the threshold vs. frequency curve can be partially related to the membrane biophysics of the remaining spiral ganglion and/or dendrites.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve: The effect of electrode position on neural excitation

TL;DR: The present results indicate that the optimum placement of a Melbourne/Cochlear electrode array is adjacent to the peripheral dendrites, however, such a site would be difficult to achieve in practice while minimizing insertion trauma.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trends in Cochlear Implants

TL;DR: A future landscape in amplification is presented that requires a unique, yet complementary, contribution from hearing aids, middle ear implants, and cochlear implants to achieve a total solution to the entire spectrum of hearing loss treatment and management.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical Stimulation of the Auditory Nerve in Man

TL;DR: The study was initially designed to answer questions raised by the own previous experience with electrical stimulation and by the writings of others, and it was elected to describe as many observations as possible, even though some may seem redundant and others incomplete.
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Phosphenes produced by electrical stimulation of human occipital cortex, and their application to the development of a prosthesis for the blind

TL;DR: To explore the feasibility of a visual prosthesis for the blind, human visual cortex has been stimulated during a series of surgical procedures on conscious volunteers undergoing other occipital lobe surgery.
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Artificial Vision for the Blind: Electrical Stimulation of Visual Cortex Offers Hope for a Functional Prosthesis

TL;DR: Electrical stimulation of the occipital cortex resulted in discrete photic sensations or "phosphenes" in two volunteers who had been totally blind for 7 and 28 years, respectively, which reinforces the hope that a functional visual prosthesis can be developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physiological considerations in artificial stimulation of the inner ear.

TL;DR: No experiment on any deaf human subject has produced hearing that could be considered adequate for conventional speech communication, and repeated attempts to develop prosthetic devices based on electric stimulation of the auditory nerve have yielded disappointing result.
Journal ArticleDOI

I. On the electricity excited by the mere contact of conducting substances of different kinds

TL;DR: In this paper, the electricity excited by the mere contact of conducting substances of different kinds is discussed, and the authors propose a solution to the problem of the electricity being excited by mere contact with conducting substances.
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