Abstract

A growing body of research is focused on identifying and understanding the neurophysiological mechanisms that underlie tinnitus. Unfortunately, however, most current models cannot adequately explain the majority of tinnitus features. For instance, although tinnitus generally appears within minutes after entering a silent environment, most models postulate that tinnitus emerges over a much larger timescale (days). Similarly, there is a limited understanding of how the severity of tinnitus can differ in patients with a similar degree of hearing loss. To address this critical knowledge gap, we have formulated a novel explanatory model of tinnitus, the perception-update (PU) model, which rests on a theory of information processing and can explain several key characteristics of tinnitus onset. The PU model posits that the brain continuously updates the information received from the inner ear by comparing it to the received information immediately before. That is, the auditory system processes the relative change in sensory input, as opposed to the absolute value of the auditory input. This is analogous to the functioning of data compression technology used for music and images called differential pulse code modulation (differential PCM). The PU model proposes that the inner ear transmits sound change to the auditory cortex via an auditory N1 response, an event-related potential component that constitutes is a prime signaler of auditory input change. In cases of hearing impairment, the PU model posits that the auditory system finds itself in a state of uncertainty where perception has to be predicted based on previous stimulation parameters, which can lead to the emergence of tinnitus.

Highlights

  • Tinnitus is the perception of a sound in the absence of a corresponding external acoustic stimulus

  • Many explanatory models of tinnitus have been proposed to date, few adequately explain the ensemble of features that characterize the phantom percept (Sedley et al, 2016)

  • Almost all models hypothesize that a change in neural activity or an auditory cortex structural abnormality is the main driver of tinnitus (Henry et al, 2014)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Tinnitus is the perception of a sound in the absence of a corresponding external acoustic stimulus. The recently published predictive coding model, which posits that the brain predicts perception based on previous stimulation states, can explain the majority of observed tinnitus features (Sedley et al, 2016). In the case of tinnitus (Figure 3C), the PU model proposes that once the acoustic stimulation drops below the lower limit of hearing capability for a given frequency for a duration period longer than the length of sensory memory, perception cannot be maintained and becomes uncertain.  In cases of Residual inhibition tinnitus loudness < TL.: described later

Acute tinnitus
Findings
CONCLUSION
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