4.7 Article

Direct Cochlear Recordings in Humans Show a Theta Rhythmic Modulation of Auditory Nerve Activity by Selective Attention

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 42, Issue 7, Pages 1343-1351

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0665-21.2021

Keywords

auditory; auditory nerve; cochlear implants; lateral olivocochlear complex; selective attention; top-down

Categories

Funding

  1. Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG
  2. BRIDGE 1 project SmartCIs) [871232]
  3. Austrian Science Fund (FWF
  4. Doctoral College Imaging the Mind) [W1233-B]

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This study found that the auditory nerve in cochlear implant users is sensitive to selective attention, and the relevant neural activity can be decoded from single-trial data. These findings have important implications for the future development of cochlear implant technology and closed-loop systems.
The architecture of the efferent auditory system enables prioritization of strongly overlapping spatiotemporal cochlear activation patterns elicited by relevant and irrelevant inputs. So far, attempts at finding such attentional modulations of cochlear activity delivered indirect insights in humans or required direct recordings in animals. The extent to which spiral ganglion cells forming the human auditory nerve are sensitive to selective attention remains largely unknown. We investigated this question by testing the effects of attending to either the auditory or visual modality in human cochlear implant (CI) users (3 female, 13 male). Auditory nerve activity was directly recorded with standard CIs during a silent (anticipatory) cue-target interval. When attending the upcoming auditory input, ongoing auditory nerve activity within the theta range (5-8 Hz) was enhanced. Crucially, using the broadband signal (4-25 Hz), a classifier was even able to decode the attended modality from single-trial data. Follow-up analysis showed that the effect was not driven by a narrow frequency in particular. Using direct cochlear recordings from deaf individuals, our findings suggest that cochlear spiral ganglion cells are sensitive to top-down attentional modulations. Given the putatively broad hair-cell degeneration of these individuals, the effects are likely mediated by alternative efferent pathways compared with previous studies using otoacoustic emissions. Successful classification of single-trial data could additionally have a significant impact on future closed-loop CI developments that incorporate real-time optimization of CI parameters based on the current mental state of the user.

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