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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 1 January 2002, pp. 493-507
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Kresge Hearing Research Institute (Department of Otorhinolaryngology) and Neuroscience Program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0506
Middlebrooks, John C. and
Julie
Arenberg Bierer.
Auditory Cortical Images of Cochlear-Implant Stimuli: Coding of
Stimulus Channel and Current Level. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 493-507, 2002. This study quantified the
accuracy with which populations of neurons in the auditory cortex can
represent aspects of electrical cochlear stimuli presented through a
cochlear implant. We tested the accuracy of coding of the place of
stimulation (i.e., identification of the active stimulation channel)
and of the stimulus current level. Physiological data came from the
companion study, which recorded spike activity of neurons
simultaneously from 16 sites along the tonotopic axis of the guinea
pig's auditory cortex. In that study, cochlear electrical stimuli were
presented to acutely deafened animals through a 6-electrode animal
version of the 22-electrode Nucleus banded electrode array (Cochlear).
Cochlear electrode configurations consisted of monopolar (MP), bipolar
(BP + N) with N inactive electrodes between the
active and return electrodes (0
N
3),
tripolar (TP) with one active electrode and two flanking return
electrodes, and common ground (CG) with one active electrode and as
many as five return electrodes. In the present analysis, an artificial
neural network was trained to recognize spatiotemporal patterns of
cortical activity in response to single presentations of particular
stimuli and, thereby, to identify those stimuli. The accuracy of
pair-wise discrimination of stimulation channels or of current levels
was represented by the discrimination index, d', where
d' = 1 was taken as threshold. In many cases, the threshold for discrimination of place of cochlear stimulation was <0.75 mm, and
the threshold for discrimination of current levels was <1 dB. Cochlear
electrode configurations varied in the accuracy with which they
signaled to the auditory cortex the place of cochlear stimulation. The
BP + N and TP configurations provided considerably greater
sensitivity to place of stimulation than did the MP configuration. The
TP configuration maintained accurate signaling of place of stimulation
up to the highest current levels, whereas sensitivity was degraded at
high current levels in BP + N configurations. Electrode
configurations also varied in the dynamic range over which they
signaled stimulus current level. Dynamic ranges were widest for the BP + 0 configuration and narrowest for the TP configuration. That is, the
configuration that showed the most accurate signaling of cochlear place
of stimulation (TP) showed the most restricted dynamic range for
signaling of current level. These results suggest that the choice of
the optimal electrode configuration for use by human
cochlear-prosthesis users would depend on the particular demands of the
speech-processing strategy that is to be employed.
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