Journal article
Cochlear implant use following neonatal deafness influences the cochleotopic organization of the primary auditory cortex in cats
JB Fallon, DRF Irvine, RK Shepherd
Journal of Comparative Neurology | WILEY | Published : 2009
DOI: 10.1002/cne.21886
Abstract
Electrical stimulation of spiral ganglion neurons in a deafened cochlea, via a cochlear implant, provides a means of investigating the effects of the removal and subsequent restoration of afferent input on the functional organization of the primary auditory cortex (AI). We neonatally deafened 17 cats before the onset of hearing, thereby abolishing virtually all afferent input from the auditory periphery. In seven animals the auditory pathway was chronically reactivated with environmentally derived electrical stimuli presented via a multichannel intracochlear electrode array implanted at 8 weeks of age. Electrical stimulation was provided by a clinical cochlear implant that was used continuou..
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Awarded by National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Funding Acknowledgements
Grant sponsor: National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD); Grant numbers: NO1-DC-3-1005 and HHS-N-263-200700053-C; Grant sponsor: The Bionic Ear Institute; Grant sponsor: Victorian State Government.