U-M scientists develop first micro-machined
mechanical cochlea
February 2005
Editor: I've often wondered if anyone is pursuing the development of
an artificial cochlea as a treatment for hearing loss. It seems that the
folks at the University of Michigan are not only pursuing it, but have
developed their first prototype. Here are portions of the press release!
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ANN ARBOR, Mich.-Scientists at U-M have developed the first
micro-machined, life-sized, mechanical cochlea, the tiny organ
responsible for converting acoustic vibrations into electrical signals
for the brain to "read" and interpret as different sounds.
Most people with hearing loss have lost the ability to translate
acoustic sound waves into electrical signals for the brain, so
developing a device capable of simulating this function is an important
step in the effort to help at least some of the estimated 560 million
people who will experience hearing loss by this year. While the U-M
system is not yet ready for use as an implant, the 3-centimeter device
could potentially be used as part of a cochlear implant. More immediate
applications include a low-power sensor for military or commercial
applications, said College of Engineering associate professor Karl Grosh.
The three advantages of the mechanical cochlea built at U-M are its
life-sized dimensions, its suitability for mass production, and its use
of a unique low-power mechanical method to do acoustic signal
processing, Grosh said. The human cochlea is a snail-shaped organ
measuring about a cubic centimeter in the inner ear. If you unwind the
spiral, it would equal the length of the U-M mechanical cochlea.
Researchers micro-machined the device using a technique similar to those
used to make integrated circuits, which means it can be mass produced.
The mechanical cochlea works in the same way as its biological
counterpart. In the biological cochlea, the basilar membrane, which
winds along the cochlear spiral, is stiffer at the base and becomes
softer as it approaches the center. In the engineered cochlea developed
by Grosh and doctoral student Robert White, a fluid-filled duct etched
onto a chip acts as the cochlear spiral. When sound waves enter the
mechanical cochlea's input membrane, a wave is created, which travels
down the duct, interacting with a tapered micro-machined membrane,
analogous to the basilar membrane. This process allows the device to
separate different frequency tones. In the biological cochlea, sensory
hair cells in the spiral detect the sound waves traveling through the
fluid, and translate the sound waves into electrical signals, which the
auditory nerve carries to the brain. The ear hears different sounds
depending on where the wave vibrates in the cochlea.
The goal is to use the mechanical cochlea as a sensitive microphone,
perhaps in tandem with a cochlear implant, Grosh said, the same way an
external microphone, a microprocessor and an antenna work together in
present implants. Cochlear implants work by sending signals for
different frequencies to electrodes implanted in the cochlear spiral.
The auditory nerves then transport these signals to the brain.
Researchers are adding arrays of sensors to the mechanical cochlea,
which would make it possible to use the new device to drive the
electrodes in a cochlear implant.
[snip]