
How the Ear Works
... impairment. The hair cells are “tuned” to respond to specific pitches, so depending on which hair cells are damaged, a child may be able to hear certain pitches better than others. When sensorineural hearing loss occurs sounds need to be louder, especially in the pitch range where the hair cells are ...
... impairment. The hair cells are “tuned” to respond to specific pitches, so depending on which hair cells are damaged, a child may be able to hear certain pitches better than others. When sensorineural hearing loss occurs sounds need to be louder, especially in the pitch range where the hair cells are ...
Cochlear Implants
... The demand for CIs is increasing annually by 20%. About 250 hospitals across the country perform cochlear implant procedures. A recent study on cochlear implants demonstrated that special education in elementary school is less necessary when children have had "greater than two years of implant exper ...
... The demand for CIs is increasing annually by 20%. About 250 hospitals across the country perform cochlear implant procedures. A recent study on cochlear implants demonstrated that special education in elementary school is less necessary when children have had "greater than two years of implant exper ...
SPHS3312 - the Office of Planning and Assessment
... Content --- 60%/Question Question is addressed properly with relevant facts included. Organization --- 15%/Question ...
... Content --- 60%/Question Question is addressed properly with relevant facts included. Organization --- 15%/Question ...
Stimulus Coding in the Auditory Nerve
... Neurological Bases of Hearing. Edited by G. M. Edelman, W. E. Gall, and W. M. Cowan. Wiley: New York, 1988, pp. 515-558. Figure removed due to copyright reasons. See: Delgutte, B. “Two-tone suppression in auditory-nerve fibers: Dependence on suppressor frequency and level.” Hearing Research 49 (1990 ...
... Neurological Bases of Hearing. Edited by G. M. Edelman, W. E. Gall, and W. M. Cowan. Wiley: New York, 1988, pp. 515-558. Figure removed due to copyright reasons. See: Delgutte, B. “Two-tone suppression in auditory-nerve fibers: Dependence on suppressor frequency and level.” Hearing Research 49 (1990 ...
Auditory Periphery - Center for Neural Science
... skin as a nerve supply had at an earlier time proved to be impractical, and so I simply placed my arm against the model. To my surprise, although the traveling waves ran along the whole length of the membrane with almost the same amplitude, and only a quite flat maximum at one spot, the sensations a ...
... skin as a nerve supply had at an earlier time proved to be impractical, and so I simply placed my arm against the model. To my surprise, although the traveling waves ran along the whole length of the membrane with almost the same amplitude, and only a quite flat maximum at one spot, the sensations a ...
Auditory Perception P1
... by finding the pure tone amplitude that produces a criterion response in an 8th nerve fiber (cat). ...
... by finding the pure tone amplitude that produces a criterion response in an 8th nerve fiber (cat). ...
Auditory perception - Socialscientist.us
... Production and propagation Sound is carried by pressure variations in some material, which can be a solid, a liquid, or a gas. Because we are most familiar with sound as pressure variations in the air, this section will focus on how sound waves are produced in, and transmitted through, the air. Mole ...
... Production and propagation Sound is carried by pressure variations in some material, which can be a solid, a liquid, or a gas. Because we are most familiar with sound as pressure variations in the air, this section will focus on how sound waves are produced in, and transmitted through, the air. Mole ...
Hi-pro - Hearing Aid
... The nerve pathways in the auditory nerve itself can also become damaged, preventing the signals from reaching the brain. Although this damage can be caused by exposure to loud noise - through working in a noisy environment for too long - the primary reason is aging. People with sensorineural hearing ...
... The nerve pathways in the auditory nerve itself can also become damaged, preventing the signals from reaching the brain. Although this damage can be caused by exposure to loud noise - through working in a noisy environment for too long - the primary reason is aging. People with sensorineural hearing ...
The Ear Tone Toolbox for Auditory Distortion Product
... enables the composer and performer access to additional harmonic content, produces spatial depth between sound sources, and creates an intimate interactive listening experience. Until this point, no widely released music software allows the direct synthesis of auditory distortion products. The Ear T ...
... enables the composer and performer access to additional harmonic content, produces spatial depth between sound sources, and creates an intimate interactive listening experience. Until this point, no widely released music software allows the direct synthesis of auditory distortion products. The Ear T ...
Audiological+Assessment+and+Support - 08FACEP802C
... infants are screened annually! Several studies indicate variance in the prevalence of newborns with congenital hearing loss in the United States. The overall estimates are between 1 to 6 per 1,000 newborns. Most children with congenital hearing loss have hearing impairment at birth and are potenti ...
... infants are screened annually! Several studies indicate variance in the prevalence of newborns with congenital hearing loss in the United States. The overall estimates are between 1 to 6 per 1,000 newborns. Most children with congenital hearing loss have hearing impairment at birth and are potenti ...
Osteogenesis Imperfecta of the Temporal Bone
... OI is one of the inherited connective tissue disorders that results in brittle bones. The molecular defects reside in various mutations that lead to decreased or defective type 1 collagen synthesis (1–3). In greater than 90% of cases, OI results from mutation in one of two genes: COL1A1 gene on chro ...
... OI is one of the inherited connective tissue disorders that results in brittle bones. The molecular defects reside in various mutations that lead to decreased or defective type 1 collagen synthesis (1–3). In greater than 90% of cases, OI results from mutation in one of two genes: COL1A1 gene on chro ...