Publisher’s permission requested and denied.We have previously shown that acute electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve using charge-balanced biphasic current pulses presented continuously can lead to a prolonged decrement in auditory nerve excitability (Tykocinski et al., Hear. Res. 88 (1995), 124-142). This work also demonstrated a reduction in electrically evoked auditory brainstem response (EABR) amplitude decrement when using an otherwise equivalent pulse train with a 50% duty cycle. In the present study we have extended this work in order to compare the effects of electrical stimulation using both fixed amplitude electrical pulse trains and amplitude modulated (AM) pulse trains that more accurately model the dynamic stimulus para...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Journal of Clinical Engineering 1992. This ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1997 publishe...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.While recent studies have suggested that electrical stim...
This is an abstract of a paper from the Proceedings of the Australian Physiological and Pharmacologi...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.To help deaf patients who cannot benefit from the cochle...
Electrically Auditory Steady State Responses (EASSRs) are EEG potentials in response to periodic ele...
Electrically Auditory Steady State Responses (EASSRs) are EEG potentials in response to periodic ele...
Cochlear implants have been shown to successfully provide profoundly deaf patients with auditory cue...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
Previous experimental studies have shown that chronic electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve u...
This is an abstract of a paper from the Proceedings of the Australian Physiological and Pharmacologi...
Cochlear implants have been shown to successfully provide profoundly deaf patients with auditory cue...
Auditory steady-state responses (ASSRs) can be evoked by sinusoidally amplitude-modulated tones or b...
Electrically evoked auditory steady-state responses (EASSRs) are EEG potentials in response to perio...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Journal of Clinical Engineering 1992. This ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1997 publishe...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.While recent studies have suggested that electrical stim...
This is an abstract of a paper from the Proceedings of the Australian Physiological and Pharmacologi...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.To help deaf patients who cannot benefit from the cochle...
Electrically Auditory Steady State Responses (EASSRs) are EEG potentials in response to periodic ele...
Electrically Auditory Steady State Responses (EASSRs) are EEG potentials in response to periodic ele...
Cochlear implants have been shown to successfully provide profoundly deaf patients with auditory cue...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
Previous experimental studies have shown that chronic electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve u...
This is an abstract of a paper from the Proceedings of the Australian Physiological and Pharmacologi...
Cochlear implants have been shown to successfully provide profoundly deaf patients with auditory cue...
Auditory steady-state responses (ASSRs) can be evoked by sinusoidally amplitude-modulated tones or b...
Electrically evoked auditory steady-state responses (EASSRs) are EEG potentials in response to perio...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Journal of Clinical Engineering 1992. This ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
This is an abstract of a paper from Proceedings of the Australian Neuroscience Society 1997 publishe...