All Stories

  1. Auditory processing linked to cognitive impairment
  2. Comparison of Subjective and Objective Measures of Hearing, Auditory Processing, and Cognition Among Older Adults With and Without Mild Cognitive Impairment
  3. Auditory Processing of Older Adults With Probable Mild Cognitive Impairment
  4. Attention demands of language production in adults who stutter
  5. Association of Hearing Impairment and Subsequent Driving Mobility in Older Adults
  6. Marking time: The precise measurement of auditory gap detection across the lifespan
  7. Perceptual and cognitive neural correlates of the useful field of view test in older adults
  8. Mechanisms of the Hearing–Cognition Relationship
  9. Cortical auditory evoked responses and mild cognitive impairment
  10. Interaction of Musicianship and Aging: A Comparison of Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials
  11. Cognitive training and selective attention in the aging brain: An electrophysiological study
  12. An examination of mediators of the transfer of cognitive speed of processing training to everyday functional performance.
  13. Adaptive Tests of Temporal Resolution -- Adult Version
  14. An adaptive clinical test of temporal resolution: Age effects
  15. Coordinator's Column
  16. From the Coordinator
  17. Preattentive Cortical-Evoked Responses to Pure Tones, Harmonic Tones, and Speech: Influence of Music Training
  18. Hearing of note: An electrophysiologic and psychoacoustic comparison of pitch discrimination between vocal and instrumental musicians
  19. Cortical Evoked Response to Gaps in Noise: Within-Channel and Across-Channel Conditions
  20. Evaluation of auditory temporal processing
  21. Treatment of Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo: Necessity of Postmaneuver Patient Restrictions
  22. Effects of Age and Hearing Loss on Gap Detection and the Precedence Effect
  23. Effect of Age on Silent Gap Discrimination in Synthetic Speech Stimuli
  24. Modulation of Presbycusis: Current Status and Future Directions
  25. Binaural Gap Duration Discrimination in Listeners with Impaired Hearing and Normal Hearing