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Neural prostheses and brain plasticity

James B Fallon1,2,3, Dexter R F Irvine1 and Robert K Shepherd1,2

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The success of modern neural prostheses is dependent on a complex interplay between the devices' hardware and software and the dynamic environment in which the devices operate: the patient's body or 'wetware'. Over 120 000 severe/profoundly deaf individuals presently receive information enabling auditory awareness and speech perception from cochlear implants. The cochlear implant therefore provides a useful case study for a review of the complex interactions between hardware, software and wetware, and of the important role of the dynamic nature of wetware. In the case of neural prostheses, the most critical component of that wetware is the central nervous system. This paper will examine the evidence of changes in the central auditory system that contribute to changes in performance with a cochlear implant, and discuss how these changes relate to electrophysiological and functional imaging studies in humans. The relationship between the human data and evidence from animals of the remarkable capacity for plastic change of the central auditory system, even into adulthood, will then be examined. Finally, we will discuss the role of brain plasticity in neural prostheses in general.


PACS

87.85.Wc Neural engineering

43.64.Me Effects of electrical stimulation, cochlear implant

87.19.L- Neuroscience

87.85.J- Biomaterials

Subjects

Medical physics

Biological physics

Dates

Issue 6 (December 2009)

Received 21 January 2009, accepted for publication 6 July 2009

Published 23 October 2009



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