Journal article
Effects of deafness and cochlear implant use on temporal response characteristics in cat primary auditory cortex
JB Fallon, RK Shepherd, DAX Nayagam, AK Wise, LF Heffer, TG Landry, DRF Irvine
Hearing Research | ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV | Published : 2014
Abstract
We have previously shown that neonatal deafness of 7-13 months duration leads to loss of cochleotopy in the primary auditory cortex (AI) that can be reversed by cochlear implant use. Here we describe the effects of a similar duration of deafness and cochlear implant use on temporal processing. Specifically, we compared the temporal resolution of neurons in AI of young adult normal-hearing cats that were acutely deafened and implanted immediately prior to recording with that in three groups of neonatally deafened cats. One group of neonatally deafened cats received no chronic stimulation. The other two groups received up to 8 months of either low- or high-rate (50 or 500 pulses per second per..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We are grateful for funding support from the National Institutes of Health NIDCD (NO1-DC-3-1005 & HHS-N-263-2007-00053-C), the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, and the Victorian State Government through their Operational Infrastructure Support scheme.