All Stories

  1. Gender Identity Shapes Professional Experiences in Communication Sciences and Disorders
  2. Relationship Between Psychophysical Tuning Curves and Vowel Identification in Noise in Children and Adults With Cochlear Implants
  3. Audiometric Profiles Across a Clinical Population of Children With Hyperacusis
  4. Hyperacusis Diagnosis and Management in the United States: Clinical Audiology Practice Patterns
  5. Asymmetric hearing thresholds are associated with hyperacusis in a large clinical population
  6. Programming Levels and Speech Perception in Pediatric Cochlear Implant Recipients With Enlarged Vestibular Aqueduct or GJB2 Mutation
  7. Automatic identification of tinnitus malingering based on overt and covert behavioral responses during psychoacoustic testing
  8. Clinical and investigational tools for monitoring noise-induced hyperacusis
  9. Estimated cochlear neural degeneration is associated with loudness hypersensitivity in individuals with normal audiograms
  10. Spectral Resolution Development in Children With Normal Hearing and With Cochlear Implants: A Review of Behavioral Studies
  11. Automatic Identification of Tinnitus Malingering Based on Overt and Covert Behavioral Responses During Psychoacoustic Testing
  12. The Relationship Between Impedance, Programming and Word Recognition in a Large Clinical Dataset of Cochlear Implant Recipients
  13. Single-Channel Focused Thresholds Relate to Vowel Identification in Pediatric and Adult Cochlear Implant Listeners
  14. Recovery from forward masking in cochlear implant listeners: Effects of age and the electrode-neuron interface
  15. Enhanced loudness perception in ears with reduced peripheral function: A remote psychoacoustic investigation
  16. Audiometric Predictors of Bothersome Tinnitus in a Large Clinical Cohort of Adults With Sensorineural Hearing Loss
  17. Auditory Detection Thresholds and Cochlear Resistivity Differ Between Pediatric Cochlear Implant Listeners With Enlarged Vestibular Aqueduct and Those With Connexin-26 Mutations
  18. Identifying Cochlear Implant Channels With Relatively Poor Electrode-Neuron Interfaces Using the Electrically Evoked Compound Action Potential
  19. Electrophysiological Estimates of the Electrode–Neuron Interface Differ Between Younger and Older Listeners With Cochlear Implants
  20. Evaluating Psychophysical Polarity Sensitivity as an Indirect Estimate of Neural Status in Cochlear Implant Listeners
  21. The Estimated Electrode-Neuron Interface in Cochlear Implant Listeners Is Different for Early-Implanted Children and Late-Implanted Adults
  22. Reducing Simulated Channel Interaction Reveals Differences in Phoneme Identification Between Children and Adults With Normal Hearing
  23. Polarity Sensitivity in Pediatric and Adult Cochlear Implant Listeners
  24. Is Visual Processing Related to Auditory Speech Perception in CIs?
  25. Visual Temporal Acuity Is Related to Auditory Speech Perception Abilities in Cochlear Implant Users
  26. The Effects of Acoustic Bandwidth on Simulated Bimodal Benefit in Children and Adults with Normal Hearing
  27. Preserved Acoustic Hearing in Cochlear Implantation Improves Speech Perception
  28. Consistency of Attenuation across Multiple Fittings of Custom and Non-custom Earplugs