Abstract

CIs stimulate the auditory nerve fibers (ANF) with a train of amplitude modulated current pulses. Depending on polarity, the pulses can generate spikes at different sites along the ANF. The latency difference between spikes generated at the central and the peripheral axons was found to be up to 200 μs in cats and up to 450 μs in humans. These timing differences could be the reason underlying the poor performance of CI listeners in ITD perception. A model of ANF responses to electrical stimulation (Joshi et al., 2016), which includes two sites of spike generation along the ANF was used to simulate the ANF responses to constant-amplitude and modulated pulse trains for different pulse-rates. The fidelity of the temporal coding was quantified by calculating the phase-locking value. The results show that an increase in pulse-rate leads to higher uncertainty in the site of spike generation, reduction in phase-locking, and increase in variance of its distribution. This may account for impaired ITD thresholds obs...

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