Research

How Pharmacists Can Help Bridge the Gap in Hearing Care for Seniors   

After reviewing the literature on pharmacy, audiology, and their integration, this paper aims to provide pharmacists with education on hearing loss that colleagues in audiology believe is most critical for pharmacists.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Hearing Aid Use Improves Brain Processing Over Time

The brain adjusts quickly to amplified sound—that’s a good thing. But the brain’s ability to fully interpret amplified signals in a meaningful way requires a longer period of time. The typical hearing aid trial period is 30 days, so the hearing aid user may not be experiencing the full benefits of amplification at the end of that period.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Protocols for Preparing Mouse Balance Organs for Research

One challenge in studying vestibular organs is their location within the bony inner ear and their small size, especially in mice, which have become an advantageous mammalian model.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Clues to How the Auditory Cortex Controls Subcortical Circuits

Our results may provide broadly generalizable insight into how the mammalian brain dynamically processes incoming sensory information.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Hearing Health Foundation Mourns the Passing of Neil Segil, Ph.D.

Neil Segil, Ph.D., died peacefully in his sleep on July 2 at his home in California. He had been battling pancreatic cancer and was able to spend the last couple of months at home with his family. Neil’s contributions to science, HHF’s Hearing Restoration Project, and many colleagues’ careers were invaluable.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

If Only We Could See the Noise Exposure

With a noisy holiday on the horizon (hello, fireworks!), let’s remember how too much noise poses a risk to our hearing and overall well-being, and how we should protect our hearing, for life.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Perceptual Decision-Making for Speech Recognition in Noise

Our study indicates that perceptual decision-making is engaged for difficult word recognition conditions, and that frontal cortex activity may adjust how much information is collected to benefit word recognition task performance.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

The Enduring Legacy of Les Paul in Music and Science

Since 2014 the Les Paul Foundation has funded six Emerging Research Grants on tinnitus, deepening our understanding of its causes as well as improving diagnosis, treatment, and prevention.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Hope for Treatments Against Hearing Loss as 10 New Genes Identified

Researchers argue that the stria vascularis, a part of the cochlea in the ear, is a new target for treatments to help people with hearing loss.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE

Using Algorithms to Measure Brain Response Times to Auditory Nerve Stimulation

The proposed algorithms could provide a clue on the signal response and its shifts in the brain during the development of hyperactivity, a neural mechanism of tinnitus, and lead to an in-depth understanding of the information flow inside the auditory pathway. This will help us to better understand the mechanisms of tinnitus.

Print Friendly and PDF

BLOG ARCHIVE