Abstract

Cochlear implants (CIs) restore hearing using an array of electrodes implanted in the cochlea to directly stimulate auditory nerve fibers (ANFs). Hearing outcomes with CIs are dependent on the health of the ANFs. In this research, we developed an approach to estimate the health of ANFs using patient-customized, image-based computational models of CI stimulation. Our stimulation models build on a previous model-based solution to estimate the intra-cochlear electric field (EF) created by the CI. Herein, we propose to use the estimated EF to drive ANF models representing 75 nerve bundles along the length of the cochlea. We propose a method to detect the neural health of the ANF models by optimizing neural health parameters to minimize the sum of squared differences between simulated and the physiological measurements available via patients' CIs. The resulting health parameters provide an estimate of the health of ANF bundles. Experiments with 8 subjects show promising model prediction accuracy, with excellent agreement between neural stimulation responses that are clinically measured and those that are predicted by our parameter optimized models. These results suggest our modeling approach may provide an accurate estimation of ANF health for CI users.

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