• DocumentCode
    3199537
  • Title

    Electronic design of an eight-channel-stimulator for DSP-driven cochlear prostheses and prospective rehabilitation technique dedicated to deafness disability

  • Author

    Hamida, A.B. ; Masmoudi, Med ; Ghorbel, Med

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. Eng., Sfax Univ., Tunisia
  • Volume
    2
  • fYear
    2000
  • fDate
    2000
  • Firstpage
    619
  • Abstract
    In this article, the authors were interested in the design of an electronic circuit for a versatile stimulator dedicated to cochlear prostheses. As a first approach, the design was tentatively conceived with eight stimulating channels because it could be possible to provide additional channels. On the other hand, a prospective technique for patient rehabilitation was also studied in order to test as well as to prove the efficiency and the versatility of the conceived stimulator. This under-the skin micro-stimulator is dedicated to operate with any DSP- driven cochlear-prosthesis systems for executing numerical data with great flexibility. The major parts in this electronic circuit were designed around a logical processing unit for commanding the stimulation stage. It includes a transmission bus, which could differentiate the two main stages: the decoding stage and the stimulation stage. When receiving transmitted data from the external processing part, the logic unit decodes information for commanding the eight stimulation channels. Channels work independently and were merely formed by CMOS-current sources delivering positive and negative stimuli. After processing sounds, appropriate numerical data would be transmitted from the external sound analyser to the internal micro-stimulator through an inductive link (radio-frequency communication link), using an amplitude-modulated carrier. Transmitted data specifies stimulation current level to generate at each specified channel as well as stimulation rhythm. The external processing permits sound energy extraction through different calculation methods. For rehabilitation, a visual aided-tool illustrated on computer screen was designed to identify extracted energies, and hence to control clinically stimulating-pulse levels. With this dedicated process, clinicians could set up therapeutic experiments during rehabilitation, adjust correctly the device operation-parameters and assess electrical charges (current-pulse level) injected in cochlea´s biological tissue
  • Keywords
    acoustic signal processing; bioelectric phenomena; digital signal processing chips; handicapped aids; hearing aids; patient rehabilitation; CMOS-current sources; DSP-driven cochlear prostheses; amplitude-modulated carrier; biological tissue charges assessment; deafness disability; decoding; eight-channel-stimulator; electronic design; patient rehabilitation technique; radio-frequency communication link; sound energy extraction; sound processing; stimuli; therapeutic experiments; under-the skin micro-stimulator; visual aided-tool; Circuit testing; Data mining; Decoding; Electronic circuits; Logic; Patient rehabilitation; Prosthetics; Radio frequency; Rhythm; Skin;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Industrial Electronics, 2000. ISIE 2000. Proceedings of the 2000 IEEE International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Cholula, Puebla
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-6606-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ISIE.2000.930369
  • Filename
    930369