Partial tripolar cochlear implant stimulation: Spread of excitation and forward masking in the inferior colliculus
This study examines patterns of neural activity in response to single biphasic electrical pulses, presented alone or following a forward masking pulse train, delivered by a cochlear implant. Recordings were made along the tonotopic axis of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC) in keta...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Hearing research 2010-12, Vol.270 (1), p.134-142 |
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Zusammenfassung: | This study examines patterns of neural activity in response to single biphasic electrical pulses, presented alone or following a forward masking pulse train, delivered by a cochlear implant. Recordings were made along the tonotopic axis of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC) in ketamine/xylazine anesthetized guinea pigs. The partial tripolar electrode configuration was used, which provided a systematic way to vary the tonotopic extent of ICC activation between monopolar (broad) and tripolar (narrow) extremes while maintaining the same peak of activation. The forward masking paradigm consisted of a 200 ms masker pulse train (1017 pulses per second) followed 10 ms later by a single-pulse probe stimulus; the current fraction of the probe was set to 0 (monopolar), 1 (tripolar), or 0.5 (hybrid), and the fraction of the masker was fixed at 0.5. Forward masking tuning profiles were derived from the amount of masking current required to just suppress the activity produced by a fixed-level probe. These profiles were sharper for more focused probe configurations, approximating the pattern of neural activity elicited by single (non-masked) pulses. The result helps to bridge the gap between previous findings in animals and recent psychophysical data.
► The tonotopic extent of neural activity in the inferior colliculus was examined. ► Neural activation patterns were narrower for focused electrode configurations. ► Forward masking profiles were also narrower for more focused configurations. ► Results bridge the gap between animal physiological and human psychophysical data. |
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ISSN: | 0378-5955 1878-5891 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.heares.2010.08.006 |