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Neural Masking by Sub-threshold Electric Stimuli: Animal and Computer Model Results
Authors:Charles A. Miller  Jihwan Woo  Paul J. Abbas  Ning Hu  Barbara K. Robinson
Affiliation:(1) Department of Otolaryngology, University of Iowa Hospitals & Clinics, 21201 PFP, 200 Hawkins Drive, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA;(2) Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Wendell Johnson Speech and Hearing Center, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA;(3) Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Ulsan, Ulsan, 680-749, South Korea;(4) Hough Ear Institute, 3400 N.W. 56th Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73112, USA;;
Abstract:Electric stimuli can prosthetically excite auditory nerve fibers to partially restore sensory function to individuals impaired by profound or severe hearing loss. While basic response properties of electrically stimulated auditory nerve fibers (ANF) are known, responses to complex, time-changing stimuli used clinically are inadequately understood. We report that forward-masker pulse trains can enhance and reduce ANF responsiveness to subsequent stimuli and the novel observation that sub-threshold (nonspike-evoking) electric trains can reduce responsiveness to subsequent pulse-train stimuli. The effect is observed in the responses of cat ANFs and shown by a computational biophysical ANF model that simulates rate adaptation through integration of external potassium cation (K) channels. Both low-threshold (i.e., Klt) and high-threshold (Kht) channels were simulated at each node of Ranvier. Model versions without Klt channels did not produce the sub-threshold effect. These results suggest that some such accumulation mechanism, along with Klt channels, may underlie sub-threshold masking observed in cat ANF responses. As multichannel auditory prostheses typically present sub-threshold stimuli to various ANF subsets, there is clear relevance of these findings to clinical situations.
Keywords:electric stimulation   auditory nerve   sub-threshold   cochlear implant   electric pulse train   adaptation   single fiber   functional electric stimulation   computer model
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