This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Australian Journal of Audiology 1994. This version is reproduced with permission from the publisher, Australian Academic Press. http://www.australianacademicpress.com.au/Psychophysical studies on electrical stimulation of the auditory nerve have contributed to our understanding of the coding of sound and speech signals. Those studies have also helped establish speech processing strategies for multiple-electrode cochlear implant patients. The first studies were on temporal coding of frequency and pitch perception to help determine whether a single or multiple electrode implant would be preferable for the coding of speech frequencies. Temporal frequency coding was initially studied in t...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in the Journal of the Otolaryngological Societ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Australian Journal of Audiology 1994. This ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Ear and Hearing 2000. This version is repro...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in The Australian Journal of Otolaryngology 19...
Thirty-fourth Meeting of Australian Physiological and Pharmacological Society, Clayton,Vic., 25-27 A...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.1. The development of speech processing strategies for m...
This is an abstract of a paper presented at a symposium on the Mechanisms of Hearing, held at Monash...
AbstractThis multi-disciplinary research showed sound could be coded by electrical stimulation of th...
Initial research demonstrated that only low frequencies could be mimicked with rate of electrical st...
Abstract of paper presented at XXVI International Congress of Audiology, Melbourne, 17-21 March 2002...
Our early research emphasized there was a restriction on the amount of speech and other acoustic inf...
This is a paper presented at a symposium on the Mechanisms of Hearing, held at Monash University, Me...
This is a publisher’s version of a paper from XVI World Congress of Otohinolaryngology Head and Neck...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in The Journal of Laryngology & Otology © 1980...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in the Journal of the Otolaryngological Societ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Australian Journal of Audiology 1994. This ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Ear and Hearing 2000. This version is repro...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in The Australian Journal of Otolaryngology 19...
Thirty-fourth Meeting of Australian Physiological and Pharmacological Society, Clayton,Vic., 25-27 A...
Publisher’s permission requested and denied.1. The development of speech processing strategies for m...
This is an abstract of a paper presented at a symposium on the Mechanisms of Hearing, held at Monash...
AbstractThis multi-disciplinary research showed sound could be coded by electrical stimulation of th...
Initial research demonstrated that only low frequencies could be mimicked with rate of electrical st...
Abstract of paper presented at XXVI International Congress of Audiology, Melbourne, 17-21 March 2002...
Our early research emphasized there was a restriction on the amount of speech and other acoustic inf...
This is a paper presented at a symposium on the Mechanisms of Hearing, held at Monash University, Me...
This is a publisher’s version of a paper from XVI World Congress of Otohinolaryngology Head and Neck...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Annals of Otology, Rhinology & Laryngology ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in The Journal of Laryngology & Otology © 1980...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in the Journal of the Otolaryngological Societ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Australian Journal of Audiology 1994. This ...
This is a publisher’s version of an article published in Ear and Hearing 2000. This version is repro...