Cochlear Electrode Arrays: Past, Present and Future
Cochlear implants are very successful devices: more than 60000 people use them throughout the world. Key to the success of these prostheses is the development of electrode arrays that place contacts close to the target neurons, survive for decades in the tissues of the inner ear, and that provide re...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Audiology & neurotology 2006-01, Vol.11 (2), p.77-85 |
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description | Cochlear implants are very successful devices: more than 60000 people use them throughout the world. Key to the success of these prostheses is the development of electrode arrays that place contacts close to the target neurons, survive for decades in the tissues of the inner ear, and that provide reliable and repeatable excitation to the cells of the auditory nerve. This article describes the early electrode arrays and their development into the arrays that are used presently in clinical cochlear prostheses. While integrated circuit techniques were proposed and tested in the laboratory two decades ago, the present clinical devices still are hand built and made of wire-based technologies. Current approaches that seek to automate the construction of cochlear electrode arrays are described and discussed. |
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subjects | Cochlear Implants Deafness - rehabilitation Electric Stimulation Equipment Design - trends Humans Original Paper |
title | Cochlear Electrode Arrays: Past, Present and Future |
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