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Prototype to product—developing a commercially viable neural prosthesis

Peter Seligman

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The Cochlear implant or 'Bionic ear' is a device that enables people who do not get sufficient benefit from a hearing aid to communicate with the hearing world. The Cochlear implant is not an amplifier, but a device that electrically stimulates the auditory nerve in a way that crudely mimics normal hearing, thus providing a hearing percept. Many recipients are able to understand running speech without the help of lipreading. Cochlear implants have reached a stage of maturity where there are now 170 000 recipients implanted worldwide. The commercial development of these devices has occurred over the last 30 years. This development has been multidisciplinary, including audiologists, engineers, both mechanical and electrical, histologists, materials scientists, physiologists, surgeons and speech pathologists. This paper will trace the development of the device we have today, from the engineering perspective. The special challenges of designing an active device that will work in the human body for a lifetime will be outlined. These challenges include biocompatibility, extreme reliability, safety, patient fitting and surgical issues. It is emphasized that the successful development of a neural prosthesis requires the partnership of academia and industry.


PACS

87.80.-y Biophysical techniques (research methods)

43.66.Ts Auditory prostheses, hearing aids

87.85.J- Biomaterials

87.19.R- Mechanical and electrical properties of tissues and organs

87.19.L- Neuroscience

Subjects

Instrumentation and measurement

Medical physics

Biological physics

Dates

Issue 6 (December 2009)

Received 27 February 2009, accepted for publication 12 June 2009

Published 23 October 2009



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