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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 4 April 2000, pp. 2145-2162
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Otolaryngology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0732
Beitel, Ralph E.,
Russell L. Snyder,
Christoph E. Schreiner,
Marcia W. Raggio, and
Patricia A. Leake.
Electrical Cochlear Stimulation in the Deaf Cat: Comparisons
Between Psychophysical and Central Auditory Neuronal Thresholds. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 2145-2162, 2000. Cochlear prostheses for electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve
("electrical hearing") can provide auditory capacity for profoundly
deaf adults and children, including in many cases a restored ability to
perceive speech without visual cues. A fundamental challenge in
auditory neuroscience is to understand the neural and perceptual
mechanisms that make rehabilitation of hearing possible in these deaf
humans. We have developed a feline behavioral model that allows us to
study behavioral and physiological variables in the same deaf animals.
Cats deafened by injection of ototoxic antibiotics were implanted with
either a monopolar round window electrode or a multichannel scala
tympani electrode array. To evaluate the effects of perceptually
significant electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve on the central
auditory system, an animal was trained to avoid a mild electrocutaneous
shock when biphasic current pulses (0.2 ms/phase) were delivered to its
implanted cochlea. Psychophysical detection thresholds and electrical
auditory brain stem response (EABR) thresholds were estimated in each
cat. At the conclusion of behavioral testing, acute physiological
experiments were conducted, and threshold responses were recorded for
single neurons and multineuronal clusters in the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC) and the primary auditory cortex (A1). Behavioral and neurophysiological thresholds were evaluated with reference to cochlear histopathology in the same deaf cats. The results
of the present study include: 1) in the cats implanted with
a scala tympani electrode array, the lowest ICC and A1 neural thresholds were virtually identical to the behavioral thresholds for
intracochlear bipolar stimulation; 2) behavioral thresholds were lower than ICC and A1 neural thresholds in each of the cats implanted with a monopolar round window electrode; 3) EABR
thresholds were higher than behavioral thresholds in all of the cats
(mean difference = 6.5 dB); and 4) the cumulative
number of action potentials for a sample of ICC neurons increased
monotonically as a function of the amplitude and the number of
stimulating biphasic pulses. This physiological result suggests that
the output from the ICC may be integrated spatially across neurons and
temporally integrated across pulses when the auditory nerve array is
stimulated with a train of biphasic current pulses. Because behavioral
thresholds were lower and reaction times were faster at a pulse rate of
30 pps compared with a pulse rate of 2 pps, spatial-temporal
integration in the central auditory system was presumably reflected in
psychophysical performance.
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