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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Effects of Modality and Linguistic Materials on Memory

Pattison, Jenna, Pichora-Fuller, M. Kathleen, Smith, Sherri L. 01 September 2016 (has links)
Auditory and visual tests with matched word-level and sentence-level materials were compared in order to tease apart the effects of modality and linguistic factors on recall scores. Participants were 32 young adults (27 female, 5 male) in good or excellent health, who were native English speakers (mean age = 19.9 years, SD = 1.8, range 18-26) and had at least some post-secondary education. The complex auditory and visual stimuli were sentences taken from the Revised Speech Perception in Noise (RSPIN) Test materials. Participants completed each of the four tests (2 modalities x 2 linguistic levels): simple (word-level materials) auditory, complex (sentence-level materials) auditory, simple reading, complex reading. Using the total scores, recall was better for word- than for sentence-level materials by 8.9% and recall was better for auditory than for visual materials by 10.8%. There was a significant correlation between modalities for the sentence-level conditions, and a stronger correlation for word-level materials.
22

Acoustic Stapedius Reflex Measurements

Patrick Feeney, M., Schairer, Kim Suzette 25 August 2014 (has links)
No description available.
23

Time for a Change: A Note on Hearing Loss Terminology

Clark, John Greer, Martin, Frederick N., Jerger, James, Ross, Mark, Northern, Jerry L., Keith, Robert W., Montano, Joseph, Noble, Bart E., Hickson, Louise, Martin, Jeffrey S., Chasin, Marshall, Tillery, Kim L., Katz, Jack, Hall, Jay, Roeser, Ross J., Davis, Adrian, Mueller, H. Gustav, Fagelson, Marc, Champlin, Craig A., English, Kris, Wofford, Martha 01 January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
24

Meet the 2014 ASHA Convention Co-Chairs

Handelsman, Jaynee, Williams, Lynn 01 January 2014 (has links)
No description available.
25

Otoacoustic Emissions Evoked by Two-Tone Bursts Using Linear and Non-Linear Protocol

Wiktor Jedrzejczak, W., Smurzynski, Jacek, Blinowska, Katarzyna J., Kochanek, Krzysztof, Skarzynski, Henryk 01 January 2008 (has links)
Otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) were recorded for tone bursts presented separately and as a two-tone burst complex. Signals were delivered at 70 dB SPL using a non-linear processing method and at 60 dB SPL using a linear method. Two types of stimuli were applied to record tone burst OAEs (TBOAEs): (a) cosine-windowed tone bursts of 5-ms duration with center frequencies of 1, 1.5, 2 and 3 kHz, (b) complex stimuli consisting of a digital addition of the 1-kHz tone burst together with either the 1.5-, 2- or 3-kHz tone burst. Recorded signals were processed using the method of adaptive approximations by matching pursuit (MP). The MP method allowed decomposition of signals into waveforms of defined frequency, latency, time span, and amplitude. This approach provided a high time-frequency (t-f) resolution and identified patterns of resonance modes that were characteristic for TBOAEs recorded in each ear. The effect of suppression was statistically significant only for the 1, 1.5-kHz condition and slightly greater for the non-linear mode than for the linear mode. For the dual stimulation by 1 and 1.5-kHz, the MP revealed the existence of closely positioned resonance modes associated with responses recorded individually with the stimuli differing in frequency by 500 Hz. The comparison of t-f distributions calculated for dual (two-tone bursts) and sum-of-singles conditions exhibited mutual suppression of resonance modes common to both stimuli.
26

Feasibility of Using a Smartphone-Based Hearing Aid Application to Improve Attitudes Toward Amplification and Hearing Impairment

Amlani, Amyn M., Smaldino, Joseph, Hayes, Donald, Taylor, Brian, Gessling, Erich 01 March 2019 (has links)
Objective: The objective of the study was to determine whether short-term experience (i.e., 4 weeks) with a smartphone-based hearing aid application (SHAA) might positively improve attitudes toward amplification uptake and hearing impairment. Method: We recruited 15 experienced hearing aid wearers who had ceased wearing their devices for > 1 year (i.e., “In-the-Drawer” group) and 15 individuals with self-reported hearing difficulties who had yet to adopt hearing aids (i.e., “First-Time” group). We obtained participant attitudes preand post-SHAA using 3 surveys and analyzed perceptible changes in attitude for each survey. Comparative findings were then generalized to the health belief model in the context of perceived benefits (i.e., efficacy of an action to reduce risk) and reduced perceived barriers (i.e., tangible and psychological costs that inhibit compliance and adoption). Results: A short trial period with an SHAA appears to modify the psychological perception toward amplification and reduce listener perception with respect to hearing difficulties in both groups. Conclusion: A short trial period with an SHAA improved the perceived benefits and reduced the perceived barriers in the average First-Time listener, who often delays adoption of traditional amplification. The same trial period was also found to improve perceived benefits and reduce perceived barriers for the average In-the-Drawer listener, but to a lesser degree than their First-Time counterparts.
27

The Opioid Crisis on Our Caseloadsbabies Born Addicted to Opioids Can Show Immediate Neurological and Feeding Problems. Studies Also Point to Longer-Term Effects

Proctor-Williams, Kerry 01 November 2018 (has links)
No description available.
28

Disorders of Sound Tolerance

Fagelson, Marc 01 June 2018 (has links)
A variety of unusual and challenging auditory events may affect musicians and recording engineers, particularly when associated with perceptions of excessive loudness, pitch anomalies, aversions to specific sounds, and the sensation of pain in the ears. This presentation will review mechanisms associated with disordered sound tolerance (DST), including exposure characteristics, and the many physiologic changes that result in unusual auditory symptoms such as tinnitus, hyperacusis, diplacusis, and auditory nociception, or the sensation of pain in the ears triggered by sound. Consensus regarding terminology of symptoms of DST is lacking among hearing health care professionals; labeling schemes related to elements of DST will be reviewed, as will the relation between audiometric status and DST.
29

Computational Models to Predict Safety Limits for Aided Music Listening

Boley, Jon, Johnson, Earl E. 01 June 2018 (has links)
At equal sound exposure levels, listeners with a pre-existing hearing loss are less vulnerable to music-induced hearing damage than listeners with no hearing loss. But such listeners require and often prefer to listen to music with additional amplification. But how much gain and to what output levels (in dB) are safe is somewhat unknown at this time. In this study, we use computational models to predict hearing threshold shifts from amplified music exposure. We estimate safe output limits and corresponding free-field exposure limits for listening to music with hearing amplification by minimizing permanent and temporary threshold shifts.
30

Meta-Analysis for Medical Intervention of Unilateral Vocal Fold Paralysis: Limited Evidence on Generalization of Voice Outcomes<sup>1</sup>

Nanjundeswaran, Chaya D., Carroll, Thomas L. 02 January 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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