The Latest Biology News And Medical NewsBiology News 2Health News 2Biology News 3Health News 3
HOME >> MEDICINE >> NEWS
Relearning to hear

Cochlear implants are surgically implanted devices that stimulate the auditory nerve to enable profoundly deaf persons to sense and understand speech. Adults who have lost their hearing must somehow match the signals provided by the implants to the speech sounds they heard and stored in memory before losing their hearing. To do so, they must overcome two simultaneous forms of distortion introduced by the implants -- the sound has lower frequency resolution and is shifted to a higher pitch.

Mario Svirsky and his Indiana University School of Medicine colleagues tested whether a training regimen that gradually introduced subjects to the frequency shift could improve their ability to comprehend speech. The experiment was done with an "acoustic simulation" of a cochlear implant, which allows listeners who have normal hearing to hear sounds that are degraded and frequency-shifted in a way similar to that found in cochlear implants. They found that subjects introduced to the frequency shift in a gradual way adapted sooner than those who were introduced to the full frequency shift from the beginning. Brain scans performed by Thomas Talavage at Purdue University showed systematic changes in cortical responses in one of the subjects, who was tested before and after several hours of exposure to the degraded speech.

Svirsky and Talavage concluded that human listeners can learn to understand an extremely impoverished and frequency-shifted acoustic signal, and this learning process can be facilitated by gradual exposure. These findings will be presented at the meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.


'"/>

Contact: Eric Schoch
eschoch@iupui.edu
317-274-8205
Indiana University
16-Feb-2004


Page: 1

Related medicine news :

1. Blood pressure treatment could cut risk of strokes and heart attacks
2. Blood protein predicts risk of heart attack
3. Blood transplants may be more harmful than bone marrow transplants in pediatric leukemia patients
4. Blood pressure drugs may slow deterioration of Alzheimers
5. Blood pressure control poor in elderly, says Northwestern researcher
6. Blood pressure for children and adolescents on the rise
7. Blood pressure drug helps delay ischemic brain damage in stroke patients
8. Blood screen may help cancer patients thwart radiation side effects, say Stanford researchers
9. Blood test for liver cancer risk
10. Blood-forming stem cells fail to repair heart muscle in Stanford study
11. Blood test heralds speedy stroke diagnoses
Post Your Comments:
*Name:
*Comment:
*Email:
TAG: Relearning hear

(Date:11/21/2008)... Barr Pharmaceuticals, I...olders overwhelmingly approved the proposals submi...y Teva Pharmaceuticals Industries Ltd. (Nasdaq: ... overwhelming support of the transaction by the Ba...irman and CEO. "We are pleased with the progress t...
(Date:11/21/2008)...d running increases production of neural stem cell...- In experiments in mice, exercise appears to reve...lls usually seen with aging, Taiwanese researchers...rain,s ability to stave off aging appears to be du... that is essential for the production of new brain...
(Date:11/21/2008)...wire/ -- In a statewide survey, 33 physicians cred...rgery at Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas were hono...of " Super Doctors ." , , Each year, the pu...onal Media, Inc. to survey more than 38,000 medica..."If you needed medical care, which doctor would yo...
(Date:11/21/2008).... 21 A prestigious group of physic... gather in Williamsburg, VA on March 27-29, 2009 a...cal information on cutting-edge therapeutic protoc...esearch advances that impact patient care. The ful...n information is available at www.bioconferences....
Breaking Medicine News(10 mins):Health News:Barr Shareholders Approve Pending Teva Acquisition 2Health News:Barr Shareholders Approve Pending Teva Acquisition 3Health News:Barr Shareholders Approve Pending Teva Acquisition 4Health News:Exercise Keeps the Brain Young 2Health News:Annual List of 'Super Doctors' Features 33 Texas Institute for Surgery Physicians 2Health News:17th Annual Congress on Women's Health Convenes March 27-29, 2009 in Williamsburg, VA 2
Other News:
...ich in omega-3-fatty acids may have different effe...to a study presented today at HEART RHYTHM 2006, t...essions. Although previous studies have found that...ent of atrial fibrillation (AF), the most common t...
...ers fail to stop free kicks because of shortcoming...h by Cathy Craig and colleagues, from Queen's Univ...ajectory of a ball following a curved flight path ...em is not sensitive enough to gauge a change of di...
...ecent discoveries at Mayo Clinic added two more ca...en infant death syndrome (SIDS), increasing the po...use up to 15 percent of SIDS cases. This research ... 27th Annual Scientific Sessions of the Heart Rhyt...
...ecessary medical tests are costing the U.S. health...of dollars per year, and add unnecessary patient s...Medical Center and Johns Hopkins University in the...Medicine.......Not only are the tests unwarranted,...
health news:Varying effects of fish consumption on atrial fibrillation 2health news:Eyeballs vs footballs: The final 2health news:Researchers link two more genes to sudden infant death syndrome 2health news:Millions squandered in unnecessary tests ordered in routine doctor visits 2health news:Millions squandered in unnecessary tests ordered in routine doctor visits 3
...iversity of Washington have applied research in ho... a molecular switch that enables them to turn an e...r a wide range of laboratory processes, including ...ished last week in the Proceedings of the National...
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- A study of airflow in pipes may help solve... a mystery concerning the ears of fast-swimming sharks. The results... could also lead to new a
...ence suggest that a partially genetically controll...logical pathogenesis of suicide. To investigate th...de victims, Japanese scientists measured the prote...-limiting enzyme in serotonin biosynthesis, as a p...
...-- By redesigning the shell of Ebola, Purdue Unive...s into a benevolent workhorse for gene therapy -- ...nhaled rather than injected, it might prove valuab...eplacing the infection-causing genes inside an ord...
Smart polymers provide light-activated switch to turn enzymes on and off 2Fluid flow technology takes a cue from fast-swimming sharks 2Fluid flow technology takes a cue from fast-swimming sharks 3Fluid flow technology takes a cue from fast-swimming sharks 4Fluid flow technology takes a cue from fast-swimming sharks 5Serotonergic dysfunction doesnt cause suicide 2Purdue works to transform Ebola virus from killer to healer 2Purdue works to transform Ebola virus from killer to healer 3
...nounced today that it will sell its products to th...echnology Development Co., Ltd. ("ZGZ"). Founded i...emy (China BIB), which provided services exclusive...dependent entity last year.... ZGZ is focusing on ...
...n & Johnson today announced that Craig C. Mello, P...iversity of Massachusetts Medical School, Worceste...dical Institute, has been named the inaugural reci... Research. Dr. Mello was selected for his role in ...
...co, CA, Sept. 10-14, 2006)...202-872-4400 (Washing... American Chemical Society (ACS) News Service Week... They offer a selection of research highlights fro... for the ACS national meeting in San Francisco. ....
...e. While it is one of the most preventable cancers...in the United States due to smoking, it is invaria...le to treatment. As a result, it remains the top c...he early detection of lung cancer that involves me...
Genomatix appoints distributor for the growing Chinese market 2Craig Mello named winner of The Dr. Paul Janssen Award for Biomedical Research 2ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 2ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 3ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 4ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 5ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 6ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 7ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 8ACS Weekly PressPac -- September 6, 2006 9A tNOX-based protocol for early detection of lung cancer in smokers and nonsmokers 2A tNOX-based protocol for early detection of lung cancer in smokers and nonsmokers 3