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Electro-Haptic Stimulation: A New Approach for Improving Cochlear-Implant Listening

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.581414

Keywords

vibrotactile; hearing impaired; haptic sound-localization; hearing aid; neuroprosthetic; somatosensory; tactile aid; cross-modal

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Funding

  1. William Demant Foundation

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Cochlear implants have been successful in restoring speech perception for severely to profoundly deaf individuals, but limitations remain in understanding speech in noisy environments, locating sound sources, and enjoying music. Electro-haptic stimulation (EHS) has shown to improve speech-in-noise performance and sound localization in CI users, with potential for enhancing music perception. Further research is needed to understand the neural basis of EHS enhancement and its effectiveness across different clinical populations, as well as to optimize signal-processing strategies for future haptic neuroprosthetic devices in aiding hearing-impaired individuals.
Cochlear implants (CIs) have been remarkably successful at restoring speech perception for severely to profoundly deaf individuals. Despite their success, several limitations remain, particularly in CI users' ability to understand speech in noisy environments, locate sound sources, and enjoy music. A new multimodal approach has been proposed that uses haptic stimulation to provide sound information that is poorly transmitted by the implant. This augmenting of the electrical CI signal with haptic stimulation (electro-haptic stimulation; EHS) has been shown to improve speech-in-noise performance and sound localization in CI users. There is also evidence that it could enhance music perception. We review the evidence of EHS enhancement of CI listening and discuss key areas where further research is required. These include understanding the neural basis of EHS enhancement, understanding the effectiveness of EHS across different clinical populations, and the optimization of signal-processing strategies. We also discuss the significant potential for a new generation of haptic neuroprosthetic devices to aid those who cannot access hearing-assistive technology, either because of biomedical or healthcare-access issues. While significant further research and development is required, we conclude that EHS represents a promising new approach that could, in the near future, offer a non-invasive, inexpensive means of substantially improving clinical outcomes for hearing-impaired individuals.

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