Paper
20 February 2008 Characterization of single auditory nerve fibers in response to laser stimulation
Phillip Littlefield, Agnella D. Izzo, Jagmeet Mundi, Joseph T. Walsh Jr., E. Duco Jansen, Mark Bendett, Jim Webb, Heather Ralph, Claus-Peter Richter
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Abstract
One drawback with traditional cochlear implants, which use electrical currents to stimulate spiral ganglion cells, is the ability to stimulate spatially discrete cells without overlap and electric current spread. We have recently demonstrated that spatially selective stimulation of the cochlea is possible with optical stimulation. However, for light to be a useful stimulation paradigm for stimulation of neurons, including cochlear implants, the neurons must be stimulated at high stimulus repetition rates. In this paper we utilize single fiber recordings from the auditory nerve to demonstrate that stimulation is possible at high repetition rates of the light pulses. Results showed that action potentials occurred 2.5-4. ms after the laser pulse. Maximum rates of discharge were up to 300 Hz. The action potentials did not respond strictly after the light pulse with high stimulation rates, i.e. >300 pulses per second. The correlation between the action potentials and the laser pulses decreased drastically for laser pulse repetition rate larger than 300 pulses per second.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Phillip Littlefield, Agnella D. Izzo, Jagmeet Mundi, Joseph T. Walsh Jr., E. Duco Jansen, Mark Bendett, Jim Webb, Heather Ralph, and Claus-Peter Richter "Characterization of single auditory nerve fibers in response to laser stimulation", Proc. SPIE 6854, Optical Interactions with Tissue and Cells XIX, 68540F (20 February 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.768129
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Action potentials

Optical fibers

Neurons

Nerve

Pulsed laser operation

Acoustics

Ear

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