نتایج جستجو برای: hyperacusis

تعداد نتایج: 750  

2010
Monica A. McHenry Julie M. Liss

This study was designed to determine the effect of stimulated vocal loudness on nasalance in individuals with various dysarthria subtypes. Thirty participants produced three stimulated levels of vocal loudness while reading a nonnasal passage. Data included dysarthria classification, vocal sound pressure level, nasalance, and listener perception of nasality. There was not a predictable relation...

2013
Narumasa Tsutsumida Izuru Saizen Masayuki Matsuoka Reiichiro Ishii

Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia, has expanded rapidly over the past decade. Insufficient authority is in place to address this expansion, and many residential plots have been developed in the peripheral regions of the city. The aim of this study is to estimate changes in land cover within the central part of Ulaanbaatar, which has been affected by anthropogenic disturbances. The breaks for...

Journal: :Hearing research 2004
Stéphanie Khalfa Nicole Bruneau Bernadette Rogé Nicolas Georgieff Evelyne Veuillet Jean-Louis Adrien Catherine Barthélémy Lionel Collet

Clinical reports on autism describe abnormal responses to auditory stimuli such as intolerance to sounds. The present study assessed subjective perception of loudness in subjects with autism compared to healthy controls, using two psychoacoustic tests. First, the auditory dynamic range was evaluated at six different tone frequencies. Secondly, loudness growth as a function of the intensity leve...

Journal: :Postgraduate medical journal 1988
A P Griffiths M Henderson N D Penn H Tindall

A patient is described who became poikilothermic following surgery for removal of a craniopharyngioma. Episodes of disturbed behaviour, neurological abnormalities, pancytopenia and deranged liver function could be correlated with episodes of more profound hypothermia on a background of a chronically lowered core temperature. The association of pancytopenia and neuropsychiatric disturbances with...

Journal: :Cerebral cortex 2014
Sven Vanneste Marco Congedo Dirk De Ridder

It has been suggested that an auditory phantom percept is the result of multiple, parallel but overlapping networks. One of those networks encodes tinnitus loudness and is electrophysiologically separable from a nonspecific distress network. The present study investigates how these networks anatomically overlap, what networks are involved, and how and when these networks interact. Electroenceph...

Journal: :The international tinnitus journal 2009
Marco Lugli Romano Romani Stefano Ponzi Salvatore Bacciu Stefano Parmigiani

We auditorily stimulated patients affected by subjective tinnitus with broadband noise containing a notch around their tinnitus frequency. We assessed the long-term effects on tinnitus perception in patients listening to notched noise stimuli (referred to as windowed sound therapy [WST]) by measuring the variation of subjects' tinnitus loudness over a period of 2-12 months. We tested the effect...

Journal: :Archives of otolaryngology--head & neck surgery 2002
Julie A Berry Susan L Gold Ellen Alvarez Frederick William C Gray Hinrich Staecker

OBJECTIVE To determine whether the Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), a validated patient-based outcomes measure, may improve our ability to quantify impact and assess therapy for patients with tinnitus. DESIGN Nonrandomized, prospective analysis of 32 patients undergoing tinnitus retraining therapy (TRT). Assessment tools included comprehensive audiology, a subjective self-assessment survey ...

Journal: :The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2016
Andrea C Trevino Walt Jesteadt Stephen T Neely

A multi-category psychometric function (MCPF) is introduced for modeling the stimulus-level dependence of perceptual categorical probability distributions. The MCPF is described in the context of individual-listener categorical loudness scaling (CLS) data. During a CLS task, listeners select the loudness category that best corresponds to their perception of the presented stimulus. In this study...

Journal: :Spatial vision 2006
Ji Hong Thomas V Papathomas

Recently, Kitagawa and Ichihara (2002) demonstrated that visual adaptation to an expanding or contracting disk produces a cross-modal visually-induced auditory loudness aftereffect (VALAE), which they attributed to cross-correlations of motion in three-dimensional space. Our experiments extend their results by providing evidence that attending selectively to one of two competing visual stimuli ...

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