© Conference on Implantable Auditory Prosthesis Last update: January 4, 2021
About
Conference on Implantable Auditory Prosthesis
The 2021 Conference on Implantable Auditory Prostheses is the 20th in a series of
biennial international research conferences on cochlear implants and auditory
brainstem implants. CIAP 2021 provides a unique forum for the presentation and
discussion of fundamental scientific research from a diversity of basic science
disciplines, as well as input from clinicians, engineers, and technical staff. The close
interaction among leading scientific researchers from around the world facilitates the
exchange of up-to-the-minute research results.
The CIAP meetings originated in 1983 under the auspices of the Gordon Research
Conferences that sponsored the first three such meetings. Prior to the initiation of
this series of Conferences, the need for such scientific exchange was met primarily
through informally organized meetings entitled West Coast Cochlear Prosthesis
Workshops which have since been discontinued and have been replaced by the CIAP
series.. The purpose of these meetings has been to provide for close interaction
among leading scientific researchers from around the world and to exchange up-to-
the-minute research results.
Such interaction is particularly important in this field because of its highly
interdisciplinary nature and the rapid pace of technological progress. It includes
fundamental scientific research in areas as diverse as auditory neurophysiology and
biophysics, electrochemistry and biomaterials, adhesion chemistry, cochlear anatomy
and histopathology, biomolecular techniques for tissue engineering, electrical field
theory, bioengineering, neuroradiology, signal processing, psychophysics and
perception, cognitive psychology, language development, speech science,
developmental and molecular biology, and learning. Because it involves direct
application of these pursuits to a significant clinical problem, it also requires
substantial input from experts in electrical and mechanical engineering, otologic
surgery, audiology, and speech-language pathology, as well as interaction with
technical staff from commercial companies that ultimately produce the clinical
devices.
A hallmark of these meetings has been a strong focus on hard science and in-depth
discussion of current technical issues. This is reflected in the meeting format,
retained since the first Gordon Conference, comprising invited papers presented by
speakers with expertise in their respective fields. A substantial fraction of the formal
program time is allocated for discussion among all participants. The two-year interval
between meetings permits significant incremental progress to be available for
reporting at each meeting. Generally not included are tutorials, reviews, summaries
of clinical data, or reexamination of well-established principles. Often, when progress
in a non-implant-related field is considered to have significant potential benefit for
cochlear implant development, experts from the new discipline are invited to present
their progress and participate in the entirety of the meeting to facilitate seeding of
new ideas in the implant community.
The emphasis on leading-edge science differentiates this series of meetings from
other cochlear implant conferences, which generally present a more clinical
orientation. Conference attendance has grown steadily from approximately 50
participants in 1983 to 360 in 2009 to 450 in 2011. At every meeting participants have
voiced a strong desire to reconvene at two-year intervals, and in each case a formal
mandate to do so has been provided by election of a Chair and Co-Chair to be
responsible for organizing the succeeding conference.