Tesis por compendio de publicaciones[EN] We aimed at investigating why hearing impaired (HI) listeners vary widely in their ability to understand speech in noisy environments, even when their hearing loss is compensated for with amplification. We hypothesized that outer hair cell (OHC) dysfunction affects the intelligibility of audible speech in noise, and that HI listeners with identical audiometric loss can vary widely in their degree of OHC dysfunction. To test these hypotheses, we inferred the proportion of the audiometric loss that is due to cochlear mechanical gain loss (HLOHC), and investigated the correlation between HLOHC and residual cochlear compression with the speech reception thresholds (SRTs) in noise. HLOHC and residual comp...
Speech recognition by normal-hearing listeners improves as a function of the number of spectral chan...
Understanding speech in noisy environments can be difficult, especially for people with hearing loss...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityTo extract content and meaning from a single source of sound in a q...
Identifying the multiple contributors to the audiometric loss of a hearing impaired listener at a pa...
Historically, impairment of outer hair cells (OHCs) in the cochlea was thought to be the predominant...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2004.Includes bibliographic...
An important challenge for our field lays in the understanding of the mechanisms involved in supra-t...
Listening to speech in noisy environments is difficult for listeners with normal hearing, but a task...
Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a disease that disrupts the quality of life of millions of peop...
Pure tone audiometry is a routine clinical examination used to identify hearing loss. A normal pure ...
Léger et al. (2012) measured the intelligibility of speech that was lowpass filtered at 1.5 kHz in b...
Excessive noise exposure induces alterations of the structural elements of the organ of Corti, espec...
ObjectivesTo examine the relationship between speech intelligibilities among the similar level of he...
SummaryIn patients with moderate to severe high-frequency hearing loss, cochlear damage may include ...
Purpose: Studies in rodents, and more recently humans, suggest that noise exposure can cause permane...
Speech recognition by normal-hearing listeners improves as a function of the number of spectral chan...
Understanding speech in noisy environments can be difficult, especially for people with hearing loss...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityTo extract content and meaning from a single source of sound in a q...
Identifying the multiple contributors to the audiometric loss of a hearing impaired listener at a pa...
Historically, impairment of outer hair cells (OHCs) in the cochlea was thought to be the predominant...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, 2004.Includes bibliographic...
An important challenge for our field lays in the understanding of the mechanisms involved in supra-t...
Listening to speech in noisy environments is difficult for listeners with normal hearing, but a task...
Sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) is a disease that disrupts the quality of life of millions of peop...
Pure tone audiometry is a routine clinical examination used to identify hearing loss. A normal pure ...
Léger et al. (2012) measured the intelligibility of speech that was lowpass filtered at 1.5 kHz in b...
Excessive noise exposure induces alterations of the structural elements of the organ of Corti, espec...
ObjectivesTo examine the relationship between speech intelligibilities among the similar level of he...
SummaryIn patients with moderate to severe high-frequency hearing loss, cochlear damage may include ...
Purpose: Studies in rodents, and more recently humans, suggest that noise exposure can cause permane...
Speech recognition by normal-hearing listeners improves as a function of the number of spectral chan...
Understanding speech in noisy environments can be difficult, especially for people with hearing loss...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityTo extract content and meaning from a single source of sound in a q...