Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Speech and Hearing Science

Psychophysical Auditory Filter Estimates Reveal Sharper Cochlear Tuning In Musicians, Gavin Bidelman, Jonathan Schug, Skyler Jennings, Shaum Bhagat Jul 2014

Psychophysical Auditory Filter Estimates Reveal Sharper Cochlear Tuning In Musicians, Gavin Bidelman, Jonathan Schug, Skyler Jennings, Shaum Bhagat

Faculty Publications

Musicianship confers enhancements to hearing at nearly all levels of the auditory system from periphery to percept. Musicians' superior psychophysical abilities are particularly evident in spectral discrimination and noise-degraded listening tasks, achieving higher perceptual sensitivity than their nonmusician peers. Greater spectral acuity implies that musicianship may increase auditory filter selectivity. This hypothesis was directly tested by measuring both forward- and simultaneous-masked psychophysical tuning curves. Sharper filter tuning (i.e., higher Q10) was observed in musicians compared to nonmusicians. Findings suggest musicians' pervasive listening benefits may be facilitated, in part, by superior spectral processing/decomposition as early as the auditory periphery.


Concordance Between The Chang And The International Society Of Pediatric Oncology (Siop) Ototoxicity Grading Scales In Patients Treated With Cisplatin For Medulloblastoma, Johnnie Bass, Jie Huang, Arzu Onar-Thomas, Kay Chang, Shaum Bhagat, Murali Chintagumpala, Ute Bartels, Sridharan Gururangan, Tim Hassall, John Heath, Geoffrey Mccowage, Richard Cohn, Michael Fisher, Giles Robinson, Alberto Broniscer, Amar Gajjar, James Gurney Apr 2014

Concordance Between The Chang And The International Society Of Pediatric Oncology (Siop) Ototoxicity Grading Scales In Patients Treated With Cisplatin For Medulloblastoma, Johnnie Bass, Jie Huang, Arzu Onar-Thomas, Kay Chang, Shaum Bhagat, Murali Chintagumpala, Ute Bartels, Sridharan Gururangan, Tim Hassall, John Heath, Geoffrey Mccowage, Richard Cohn, Michael Fisher, Giles Robinson, Alberto Broniscer, Amar Gajjar, James Gurney

Faculty Publications

BackgroundReporting ototoxicity is frequently complicated by use of various ototoxicity criteria. The International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) ototoxicity grading scale was recently proposed for standardized use in reporting hearing loss outcomes across institutions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the concordance between the Chang and SIOP ototoxicity grading scales. Differences between the two scales were identified and the implications these differences may have in the clinical setting were discussed.ProceduresAudiological evaluations were reviewed for 379 patients with newly diagnosed medulloblastoma (ages 3–21 years). Each patient was enrolled on one of two St. Jude clinical protocols that included craniospinal …