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NORMAL CENTRAL AUDITORY PROCESSING WITH ABNORMAL P300 RESULTS

Robert Ivey has been evaluating the P300 response since the 1980s at the University of Western Ontario. As an audiologist he was interested in the aspect of attention acquisition via subtle auditory cues (i.e. auditory cueing) in children having difficulty in school and its connection with auditory processing difficulties.

Perspectives on Conducting Interdisciplinary Research in a Geriatric Audiology Clinic

Kate Dupuis and her colleagues at Baycrest Health Sciences explore the connections between hearing loss and cognitive impairment in a geriatric population.

Hearing Aid Delay and Current Drain in Modern Digital Devices

Key considerations when hearing aid engineers design new features are processing time (delay) and battery consumption (current drain). There are not many studies that have investigated delay and current drain in modern digital hearing aids. Therefore, the purpose of this report is to provide benchmark and comparative data on these variables as acquired in the context of a yearly AuD student assignment.

A Counterpoint to the PCAST Recommendations

The author believes that OTC/DTC hearing aids have their place. However, for the majority of adults with mild-to-moderate age-related hearing losses, a guided process including fitting verification and auditory rehabilitation is needed to achieve maximum benefit with amplification. In this paper, the author gives a point-by-point argument against the PCAST’s recent conclusions and recommendations.

Predicting Musician’s Hearing Loss

Alberto Behar writes that there is nothing new regarding hearing loss from long duration exposure to loud noise. The question has always been on how loud is loud and how long a duration should be to be considered as “long.”

Development of the TTY – Part IV: The Final Chapter

In this installment of “Stories from Our Past,” Robert Traynor looks a the development of the TTY.

How Do We Incorporate Hearing Screening Into Primary Care?

Given a lack of government mandates for attention to declining hearing, Barbara Weinstein explains that the audiology community needs to raise physicians’ awareness of what happens when it is ignored.

Don’t Make Us Beg

Gael Hannan points out that consumer advocates want to work with the hearing health industry to bring about change but Canadians with hearing loss are waiting. Please, don’t make them beg.

Striking the Right Balance

Lisa Koch, AuD,  discusses what she feels is the general scope of practice audiologists should consider when including vestibular rehabilitation in their practice.

Other People’s Ideas

What impact will PSAP/hearable devices have on the practice of audiology? Through some timely blogs from our friends at HearingHealthMatters.org Calvin Staples is hoping to start a conversation among the readers of Canadian Audiologist as to what will come of the recent PCAST report.