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FEATURE ARTICLE

The Design and Function of Cochlear Implants

Fusing medicine, neural science and engineering, these devices transform human speech into an electrical code that deafened ears can understand

Michael Dorman, Blake Wilson

Hear Here

In normal hearing, sound waves traveling through air reach the tympanic membrane (ear drum) via the ear canal, causing vibrations that move the three small bones of the middle ear. This action produces a piston–like movement of the oval window, a flexible membrane in the bony shell of the cochlea. Inside the fluid–filled cochlea, oscillations from the oval window initiate a traveling wave along the basilar membrane (one that divides the cochlea along its length). Another flexible membrane, the round window, moves in a complementary way to maintain the volume of the incompressible fluid in the cochlea.

Figure 2. During normal hearing...Click to Enlarge Image

The basilar membrane has graded mechanical properties. At the base of the cochlea, near the oval and round windows, it is narrow and stiff. At the other end of the cochlea, the apex, the basilar membrane is wide and flexible. These mechanical properties give rise to a traveling wave of displacement and to points of maximal response according to the frequency or frequencies of the pressure oscillations. For a wave with a single frequency, displacement increases up to a particular point along the membrane and then drops precipitously. High frequencies produce maxima near the base of the cochlea, whereas low frequencies produce maxima near the apex.

Movements of the basilar membrane are sensed by a line of hair cells, which are attached to the top of the membrane in a matrix called the organ of Corti. Each hair cell has fine rods of protein, called stereocilia, emerging from one end. When the basilar membrane moves, these rods bend as if they were hinged at their bases. The deflection initiates a chain of electrochemical events that causes electrical spikes, or action potentials, in cells of the spiral ganglion. These cells conduct the signal to a relay station in the brainstem called the cochlear nucleus. The information ascends through multiple other nuclei on its way to the auditory cortex, the portion of the forebrain that processes auditory information.

Figure 3. The basilar membrane...Click to Enlarge Image

Within this circuit of cells, a sound's frequency is encoded by two mechanisms. The first is a place code, which indicates the spot along the tapered basilar membrane that moves the most. Stereocilia on the hair cells respond to this displacement and cause action potentials among the closest spiral–ganglion neurons. The second mechanism is a temporal code that is produced when neurons become synchronized, or phase–locked, to the period of an acoustic wave. In normal hearing, neural responses can easily match frequencies up to about 1,000 hertz. This phase–locking ability declines progressively at higher frequencies. The perception of frequency is probably based on some combination of place and temporal codes, with the temporal code being effective for low frequencies only.

Hearing is lost when hair cells become so damaged that they cannot stimulate cells of the spiral ganglion. Without regular activity, the portion of that ganglion cell that receives signals, the dendrite, may atrophy and the cells may die. Fortunately, even in the case of complete hearing loss, some spiral–ganglion cells survive and remain connected to the appropriate frequency–receiving areas in the cochlear nucleus. If electrical current from the implanted electrodes can cause action potentials among the remaining cells, then hearing can be restored. And if multiple groups of neurons (think of these as "neural channels") can be made to respond in low, middle and high frequency parts of the cochlea, then perception of speech can be restored as well.





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