Akademik

Cochlear implant
A device that is surgically placed (implanted) within the inner ear to assist selected persons with deafness to hear. Cochlear implants are not a magic potion — they rarely cure severe or profound deafness — but they can unquestionably help some hearing-impaired people, children included. For children congenitally deaf (that is, born deaf), a preschool implant can markedly increase the child's chance of being able to mainstream and function effectively in regular classes in school. What the cochlear implant does in this case is to permit the child to distinguish the sounds of language clearly enough to participate in a verbal environment. The cost of cochlear implant surgery is "amortized" by reduced reliance over time on costly support services such as speech therapy and tutoring and, particularly, by the lower cost of mainstreaming as compared to special classes for the deaf. Cochlear implants are controversial in the deaf community, which relies on highly expressive sign language and other forms of communication that deaf people do not consider to be inferior to verbal speech.

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cochlear implant n an electrical prosthetic device that enables individuals with sensorineural hearing loss to recognize some sounds and that consists of an external microphone and speech processor that receive and convert sound waves into electrical signals which are transmitted to one or more electrodes implanted in the cochlea where they stimulate the auditory nerve
cochlear implantation n

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a device to improve the hearing of profoundly deaf people who derive no benefit from conventional hearing aid. It consists of an electrode that is permanently implanted into the inner ear (cochlea). An external device with a microphone and an electronic processing unit passes information to the electrode using radio-frequency waves. The implant is powered by batteries in the external part of the device.

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a device consisting of a microphone, signal processor, external transmitter, and implanted receiver; the receiver is surgically implanted under the skin near the mastoid process above and behind the ear. It is an alternative to total deafness, although it does not actually restore hearing.

Medical dictionary. 2011.