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Blue Devil of the Week: Behind a Hearing Breakthrough

Blake Wilson鈥檚 cochlear implant research has helped more than a million people improve their hearing

In his nearly four decades on the Duke faculty, Blake Wilson has guided breakthrough research which has helped more than a million people improve their hearing. Photo by Stephen Schramm.
In his nearly four decades on the Duke faculty, Blake Wilson has guided breakthrough research which has helped more than a million people improve their hearing. Photo by Stephen Schramm.

Name: Blake S. WIlson

Position: Director of the Duke Hearing Center, Adjunct Professor in Departments of and , Consulting Professor in , Affiliated Faculty for and , and Scholar-In-Residence

Years at Duke: 38

Blake Wilson, far right, stands with members of the Duke-RTI Cochlear Implant Team in the late 1980s. Photo courtesy of Blake Wilson.What he does at Duke: Wilson is a principal developer of the modern cochlear implant, a device that enables highly useful hearing for deaf or nearly deaf persons. Starting in 1974, Wilson worked at  (RTI), where he led several projects aimed at improving the performance of the primitive early versions of the implants. In 1984, after collaborating with researchers at the University of California at San Francisco, where patient studies were underway, Duke ear surgeon, Dr. Joseph C. Farmer invited Wilson and his team 鈥渢o work a little closer to home鈥 in a laboratory the Duke Department of Surgery would provide. That phone call from Dr. Farmer initiated a long and fruitful partnership between Duke and the RTI that included creation of the Duke-RTI Cochlear Implant Program, which helped bring about major improvements in the implants.

鈥淎t the time, around 20 people worldwide had cochlear implants,鈥 Wilson, 74, said about the period in the early 1980s when he began his work. 鈥淭oday, more than a million people have them.鈥

At Duke, Wilson has held multiple adjunct appointments, co-founded the in 2008 with colleague Dr. Debara Tucci and teaches courses on neural protheses and how music affects the brain.

Blake Wilson receives the North Carolina Award alongside Governor Roy Cooper, left, and Secretary of the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources Reid Wilson, right. Photo courtesy of Blake Wilson. At present, he is the Chair of the Duke-led Lancet Commission on Hearing Loss, whose charge is to chart the paths to a world in which hearing loss is no longer a barrier to human communication and fulfillment. 

Wilson鈥檚 work has earned him many high honors; foremost among them is the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award in 2013, the in 2015, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Duke in 2019, and the North Carolina Award in 2021.

鈥淚 love the North Carolina Award,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淣ot only is it a supreme honor, but it鈥檚 from home, as is the towering and heartwarming Duke Distinguished Alumni Award.鈥

What he loves about Duke: Wilson said Duke鈥檚 diversity of expertise and spirit of collaboration creates an environment in which great ideas can be supercharged and lead to groundbreaking innovations. 

鈥淐oming up with an idea is one step, validating it is another step, publishing the results is yet another step,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淣ow you鈥檙e getting up to the 90 percent point. But it鈥檚 that final 10 percent that鈥檚 always the most difficult. Some term it the 鈥榁alley of Death.鈥 It鈥檚 where a different kind of expertise is needed to take the final step and make those wonderful findings available broadly and to people who need them. That鈥檚 an area where Duke has always been exceptionally strong.鈥 

Blake Wilson third from left, enjoys time with his wife Doris Rouse, second from left, who he met when they were both Duke undergrads, and their daughters Nadia, left, and Blair, right. Photo courtesy of Blake Wilson.The best advice received: As a kid in New Jersey, Wilson began tinkering with electronics. His father, Hank, who had a degree in electrical engineering from Duke, noticed his son鈥檚 hobby and agreed to buy him tools and use the family鈥檚 basement as a workshop.

Wilson鈥檚 father also asked neighbors if they had any gadgets such as TVs or radios that needed repairs. If so, his son would work on them for free. When the young Wilson mentioned to his father that he wasn鈥檛 sure how to fix everything, his father replied that if he kept working at it, he鈥檇 figure it out. Those words about perseverance, and his father鈥檚 belief in him, still stick with Wilson.

鈥淚n retrospect, it just showed me what a parent can do for a child,鈥 Wilson said.

Blake Wilson enjoys watching Duke's tennis teams on pretty days at Ambler Tennis Stadium. Photo courtesy of Blake Wilson. When he鈥檚 not working, he likes to: Like many in the Duke community, Wilson is a devout fan of the Duke men鈥檚 basketball team. But he鈥檚 equally passionate about the Blue Devils鈥 men鈥檚 and women鈥檚 tennis teams, watching matches in person whenever possible.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just a joy to watch,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淚 love going to the outdoor stadium, especially on a beautiful spring day, and seeing tennis played at that level.鈥

Lesson learned during the pandemic: At the start of the pandemic, Wilson was skeptical that effective collaboration could be done virtually. Two years in, he鈥檚 been impressed with how well virtual teams can function.

鈥淵ou can have frothy conversations with high levels of interaction on and that was a surprise to me,鈥 Wilson said.

Blake Wilson stands alongside Duke Provost Sally Kornbluth, left, and then-老牛影视 President Richard Brodhead, center, at the 2016 commencement ceremony. Photo courtesy of Blake Wilson. Memorable day at Duke: Wilson earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree from Duke in 1974 and later earned advanced degrees from universities in the United Kingdom and Australia. 

But in 2015, after completing a thesis on the development of the cochlear implant, Wilson earned a Ph.D. in Electrical & Computer Engineering from Duke. At the age of 68, he received the degree at the spring commencement in 2016, sitting on the stage with then-老牛影视 President Richard H. Brodhead and next to that year's commencement speaker, Mike Krzyzewski.

鈥淚t was a great experience,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淚 may have been the oldest person to receive a Ph.D. from Duke.鈥

Is there a colleague at Duke who has an intriguing job or goes above and beyond to make a difference? Nominate that person for Blue Devil of the Week.