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Showing 1 to 3 of 3 entries
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Hearing AIDS and the brain.

International journal of otolaryngology

Tremblay KL, Scollie S, Abrams HB, Sullivan JR, McMahon CM.
PMID: 25276137
Int J Otolaryngol. 2014;2014:518967. doi: 10.1155/2014/518967. Epub 2014 Sep 03.

No abstract available.

How neuroscience relates to hearing aid amplification.

International journal of otolaryngology

Tremblay KL, Miller CW.
PMID: 25045354
Int J Otolaryngol. 2014;2014:641652. doi: 10.1155/2014/641652. Epub 2014 Jun 18.

Hearing aids are used to improve sound audibility for people with hearing loss, but the ability to make use of the amplified signal, especially in the presence of competing noise, can vary across people. Here we review how neuroscientists,...

Is the auditory evoked P2 response a biomarker of learning?.

Frontiers in systems neuroscience

Tremblay KL, Ross B, Inoue K, McClannahan K, Collet G.
PMID: 24600358
Front Syst Neurosci. 2014 Feb 20;8:28. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2014.00028. eCollection 2014.

Even though auditory training exercises for humans have been shown to improve certain perceptual skills of individuals with and without hearing loss, there is a lack of knowledge pertaining to which aspects of training are responsible for the perceptual...

Showing 1 to 3 of 3 entries