keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38525155/noise-within-signal-to-noise-enhancement-via-coherent-wave-amplification-in-the-mammalian-cochlea
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alessandro Altoè, Christopher A Shera
The extraordinary sensitivity of the mammalian inner ear has captivated scientists for decades, largely due to the crucial role played by the outer hair cells (OHCs) and their unique electromotile properties. Typically arranged in three rows along the sensory epithelium, the OHCs work in concert via mechanisms collectively referred to as the "cochlear amplifier" to boost the cochlear response to faint sounds. While simplistic views attribute this enhancement solely to the OHC-based increase in cochlear gain, the inevitable presence of internal noise requires a more rigorous analysis...
2024: Physical review research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38517829/sound-and-postural-control-during-stance-tasks-in-abnormal-subjective-haptic-vertical
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kristina Anton, Arne Ernst, Dietmar Basta
BACKGROUND: Patients with vestibular impairment often suffer from postural instability. This could be compensated by other sensory systems such as the auditory system. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to investigate whether auditory input improves postural stability in patients with abnormal subjective haptic vertical (SHV). METHODS: Participants (n = 13) with normal hearing and vision, but abnormal SHV participated. Participants performed standing on firm ground and foam support (eyes open/closed) and Tandem Romberg test (eyes closed) in quiet (reference), noise and with plugged ears...
March 21, 2024: Journal of Vestibular Research: Equilibrium & Orientation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38511263/auditory-outcomes-following-cochlear-implantation-in-children-with-unilateral-hearing-loss
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shannon S Wu, Camille Dunn-Johnson, Daniel M Zeitler, Seth Schwartz, Suzanne Sutliff, Swathi Appachi, Carmen Jamis, Karen Petter, Rachel Vovos, Donald Goldberg, Samantha Anne
OBJECTIVE: Unilateral hearing loss (UHL) in children is associated with speech and language delays. Cochlear implantation (CI) is currently the only rehabilitative option that restores binaural hearing. This study aims to describe auditory outcomes in children who underwent CI for UHL and to determine the association between duration of hearing loss and auditory outcomes. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective case series. SETTING: Three tertiary-level, academic institutions...
March 21, 2024: Otology & Neurotology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38510079/speech-language-functional-communication-psychosocial-outcomes-and-qol-in-school-age-children-with-congenital-unilateral-hearing-loss
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Linda Cupples, Teresa Y C Ching, Sanna Hou
INTRODUCTION: Children with early-identified unilateral hearing loss (UHL) might be at risk for delays in early speech and language, functional communication, psychosocial skills, and quality of life (QOL). However, a paucity of relevant research prohibits strong conclusions. This study aimed to provide new evidence relevant to this issue. METHODS: Participants were 34 children, ages 9;0 to 12;7 (years;months), who were identified with UHL via newborn hearing screening...
2024: Frontiers in Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38500252/contribution-of-the-serotonergic-system-to-developmental-brain-abnormalities-in-autism-spectrum-disorder
#25
REVIEW
Jarek Wegiel, Kathryn Chadman, Eric London, Thomas Wisniewski, Jerzy Wegiel
This review highlights a key role of the serotonergic system in brain development and in distortions of normal brain development in early stages of fetal life resulting in cascades of abnormalities, including defects of neurogenesis, neuronal migration, neuronal growth, differentiation, and arborization, as well as defective neuronal circuit formation in the cortex, subcortical structures, brainstem, and cerebellum of autistic subjects. In autism, defects in regulation of neuronal growth are the most frequent and ubiquitous developmental changes associated with impaired neuron differentiation, smaller size, distorted shape, loss of spatial orientation, and distortion of cortex organization...
March 18, 2024: Autism Research: Official Journal of the International Society for Autism Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38498993/reference-data-for-a-quick-speech-in-noise-hearing-test-in-the-french-language
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Julie Bestel, Daniel Pressnitzer, Mathieu Robier, Frédéric Rembaud, Christian Renard, François Leclercq, Christophe Vincent
INTRODUCTION: Difficulties in understanding speech in noise is the most common complaint of people with hearing impairment. Thus, there is a need for tests of speech-in-noise ability in clinical settings, which have to be evaluated for each language. Here, a reference dataset is presented for a quick speech-in-noise test in the French language (Vocale Rapide dans le Bruit, VRB; Leclercq, Renard & Vincent, 2018). METHODS: A large cohort (N=641) was tested in a nationwide multicentric study...
March 18, 2024: Audiology & Neuro-otology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38493767/utricular-dysfunction-and-hearing-impairment-affect-spatial-navigation-in-community-dwelling-healthy-adults-analysis-from-the-baltimore-longitudinal-study-of-aging
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Colin R Grove, Eric Anson, Yuri Agrawal, Eleanor M Simonsick, Michael Schubert
INTRODUCTION: Spatial navigation, the ability to move through one's environment, is a complex skill utilized in everyday life. The effects of specific vestibular end-organ deficits and hearing impairments on spatial navigation have received little to no attention. We hypothesized that hearing impairment adversely affects spatial navigation and that bi-modal impairments (vestibular and hearing) further impair navigation ability. METHODS: Data from 182 participants in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging who had interpretable results for the video head impulse test (vHIT), cervical (cVEMP) and ocular (oVEMP) vestibular evoked myogenic potentials, audiometric testing, and the triangle completion test (TCT) were retrospectively analyzed...
March 15, 2024: Audiology & Neuro-otology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38484425/pediatric-version-of-speech-spatial-and-qualities-of-hearing-scale-ssq-in-cochlear-implanted-children
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
L Guerzoni, C Falzone, S Ghiselli, E Fabrizi, D Cuda
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 10, 2024: International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38478970/establishment-of-self-reported-hearing-cut-off-value-on-the-chinese-version-of-short-form-of-speech-spatial-and-qualities-of-hearing-scale-ssq12
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Linghui Meng, Dingqian Hao, Dan Li, Jing Yue, Yuzhu Wan, Li Shi
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of the Chinese version of Speech, Spatial and Qualities of Hearing Scale (C-SSQ12) in the Chinese Mandarin-speaking population and to determine its screening cut-off value by comparing measured pure-tone average (PTA), the Hearing Handicap Inventory for the Elderly-Screening Version (HHIE-S) scores and C-SSQ12 scores. DESIGN: All participants completed the C-SSQ12 questionnaire and underwent the pure-tone audiometry...
March 13, 2024: International Journal of Audiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38470085/examining-the-relationships-between-cognition-and-auditory-hallucinations-a-systematic-review
#30
REVIEW
Adrienne Bell, Wei Lin Toh, Paul Allen, Matteo Cella, Renaud Jardri, Frank Larøi, Peter Moseley, Susan L Rossell
OBJECTIVE: Auditory hallucinations (hearing voices) have been associated with a range of altered cognitive functions, pertaining to signal detection, source-monitoring, memory, inhibition and language processes. Yet, empirical results are inconsistent. Despite this, several theoretical models of auditory hallucinations persist, alongside increasing emphasis on the utility of a multidimensional framework. Thus, clarification of current evidence across the broad scope of proposed mechanisms is warranted...
March 12, 2024: Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38466421/executive-functions-in-patients-with-bilateral-and-unilateral-peripheral-vestibular-dysfunction
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Corina G Schöne, Dominique Vibert, Fred W Mast
Previous research suggests that patients with peripheral vestibular dysfunction (PVD) suffer from nonspatial cognitive problems, including executive impairments. However, previous studies that assessed executive functions are conflicting, limited to single executive components, and assessments are confounded by other cognitive functions. We compared performance in a comprehensive executive test battery in a large sample of 83 patients with several conditions of PVD (34 bilateral, 29 chronic unilateral, 20 acute unilateral) to healthy controls who were pairwise matched to patients regarding age, sex, and education...
March 11, 2024: Journal of Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38449751/-muddy-muddled-or-muffled-understanding-the-perception-of-audio-quality-in-music-by-hearing-aid-users
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Scott Bannister, Alinka E Greasley, Trevor J Cox, Michael A Akeroyd, Jon Barker, Bruno Fazenda, Jennifer Firth, Simone N Graetzer, Gerardo Roa Dabike, Rebecca R Vos, William M Whitmer
INTRODUCTION: Previous work on audio quality evaluation has demonstrated a developing convergence of the key perceptual attributes underlying judgments of quality, such as timbral, spatial and technical attributes. However, across existing research there remains a limited understanding of the crucial perceptual attributes that inform audio quality evaluation for people with hearing loss, and those who use hearing aids. This is especially the case with music, given the unique problems it presents in contrast to human speech...
2024: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38448613/altered-intra-and-inter-network-brain-functional-connectivity-associated-with-prolonged-screen-time-in-pre-school-children-with-autism-spectrum-disorder
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yang Xue, Miao-Shui Bai, Han-Yu Dong, Tian-Tian Wang, Zakaria Ahmed Mohamed, Fei-Yong Jia
Prolonged screen time (ST) has adverse effects on autistic characteristics and language development. However, the mechanisms underlying the effects of prolonged ST on the neurodevelopment of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) remain unclear. Neuroimaging technology may help to further explain the role of prolonged ST in individuals with ASD. This study included 164 cases, all cases were divided into low-dose ST exposure (LDE group 108 cases) and high-dose ST exposure (HDE group 56 cases) based on the average ST of all subjects...
March 7, 2024: European Journal of Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38433911/body-representation-drives-auditory-spatial-perception
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Paromov, Karina Moïn-Darbari, Assan Mary Cedras, Maxime Maheu, Benoit-Antoine Bacon, François Champoux
In contrast to the large body of findings confirming the influence of auditory cues on body perception and movement-related activity, the influence of body representation on spatial hearing remains essentially unexplored. Here, we use a disorientation task to assess whether a change in the body's orientation in space could lead to an illusory shift in the localization of a sound source. While most of the participants were initially able to locate the sound source with great precision, they all made substantial errors in judging the position of the same sound source following the body orientation-altering task...
March 15, 2024: IScience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38432678/an-audibility-model-of-the-headband-trial-with-a-bone-conduction-device-in-single-sided-deaf-subjects
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guido Cattani, Koenraad S Rhebergen, Adriana L Smit
OBJECTIVE: Modelling the head-shadow effect compensation and speech recognition outcomes, we aimed to study the benefits of a bone conduction device (BCD) during the headband trial for single-sided deafened (SSD) subjects. DESIGN: This study is based on a database of individual patient measurements, fitting parameters, and acoustic BCD properties retrospectively measured on a skull simulator or from existing literature. The sensation levels of the Bone-Conduction and Air-Conduction sound paths were compared, modelling three spatial conditions with speech in quiet...
March 3, 2024: International Journal of Audiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38426890/tonal-language-experience-facilitates-the-use-of-spatial-cues-for-segregating-competing-speech-in-bimodal-cochlear-implant-listeners
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Biao Chen, Xinyi Zhang, Jingyuan Chen, Ying Shi, Xinyue Zou, Ping Liu, Yongxin Li, John J Galvin, Qian-Jie Fu
English-speaking bimodal and bilateral cochlear implant (CI) users can segregate competing speech using talker sex cues but not spatial cues. While tonal language experience allows for greater utilization of talker sex cues for listeners with normal hearing, tonal language benefits remain unclear for CI users. The present study assessed the ability of Mandarin-speaking bilateral and bimodal CI users to recognize target sentences amidst speech maskers that varied in terms of spatial cues and/or talker sex cues, relative to the target...
March 1, 2024: JASA express letters
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38425330/balancing-act-a-comprehensive-review-of-vestibular-evaluation-in-cochlear-implants
#37
REVIEW
Andrea Moreno, Melissa Castillo-Bustamante, Jose A Prieto
Cochlear implantation, a transformative intervention for individuals with profound hearing loss, has evolved significantly over the years. However, its impact on the vestibular system, responsible for balance and spatial orientation, remains a subject of ongoing research and clinical consideration. This narrative review highlights key aspects of vestibular evaluation in patients undergoing cochlear implantation. Preoperative vestibular assessment is crucial to establish baseline vestibular function and identify any pre-existing balance issues...
February 2024: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38425297/toward-sound-localization-testing-in-virtual-reality-to-aid-in-the-screening-of-auditory-processing-disorders
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melissa Ramírez, Johannes M Arend, Petra von Gablenz, Heinrich R Liesefeld, Christoph Pörschmann
Sound localization testing is key for comprehensive hearing evaluations, particularly in cases of suspected auditory processing disorders. However, sound localization is not commonly assessed in clinical practice, likely due to the complexity and size of conventional measurement systems, which require semicircular loudspeaker arrays in large and acoustically treated rooms. To address this issue, we investigated the feasibility of testing sound localization in virtual reality (VR). Previous research has shown that virtualization can lead to an increase in localization blur...
2024: Trends in Hearing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38422002/protocol-for-a-multicentre-randomised-controlled-trial-of-steroid-administration-routes-for-idiopathic-sudden-sensorineural-hearing-loss-the-starfish-trial
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew E Smith, Rachel Knappett, Deborah Vickers, David White, Chris J Schramm, Samir Mehta, Yongzhong Sun, Ben Watkins, Marie Chadburn, Hugh Jarrett, Karen James, Elizabeth Brettell, Tracy E Roberts, Manohar L Bance, James R Tysome
Idiopathic sudden sensorineural hearing loss (ISSNHL) is the rapid onset of reduced hearing due to loss of function of the inner ear or hearing nerve of unknown aetiology. Evidence supports improved hearing recovery with early steroid treatment, via oral, intravenous, intratympanic or a combination of routes. The STARFISH trial aims to identify the most clinically and cost-effective route of administration of steroids as first-line treatment for ISSNHL. STARFISH is a pragmatic, multicentre, assessor-blinded, three-arm intervention, superiority randomised controlled trial (1:1:1) with an internal pilot (ISRCTN10535105, IRAS 1004878)...
2024: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38414136/speech-in-noise-assessment-in-the-routine-audiologic-test-battery-relationship-to-perceived-auditory-disability
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew B Fitzgerald, Kristina M Ward, Steven P Gianakas, Michael L Smith, Nikolas H Blevins, Austin P Swanson
OBJECTIVES: Self-assessment of perceived communication difficulty has been used in clinical and research practices for decades. Such questionnaires routinely assess the perceived ability of an individual to understand speech, particularly in background noise. Despite the emphasis on perceived performance in noise, speech recognition in routine audiologic practice is measured by word recognition in quiet (WRQ). Moreover, surprisingly little data exist that compare speech understanding in noise (SIN) abilities to perceived communication difficulty...
February 28, 2024: Ear and Hearing
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