How Do We Explain Ourselves?
Gael Hannan explains how people with hearing loss occupy an awkward place in this world that spins on the sounds of people, nature, and machines that most other people can hear and understand.
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Gael Hannan explains how people with hearing loss occupy an awkward place in this world that spins on the sounds of people, nature, and machines that most other people can hear and understand.
In this edition of “Striking the Right Balance,” column coordinator Janine Verge and her coauthor Anton Charko give us a “Proposal to Standardize Gaze during oVEMP Testing using a Chin Rest.”
The wearables are coming, the wearables are coming! Calvin explores this trend with some help from our good friends over at HearingHealthMatters.org.
Version française disponible ci-dessous The one thing that is more important than a scientific result is the method that was used to obtain this result. We have all heard of the attempts to create cold fusion in the laboratory – infinite power for all that can be manufactured in any physics laboratory just down the…
Dalhousie Students, Lyndsey Blakeley, Jenna MacGregor, Sarah McQuaid, and Michelle Zou, take an interesting look at “Evaluating the Suitability of Hearing Aid Manufacturer Websites for Older Adults.”
In this issue, we are proud to feature two more Student Poster Presentation from the 2014 CAA Conference. In this issue we give you, “Outcomes of Patients Implanted with the Bonebridge Bone Conduction Device by Ricky Chow, MCl Sc Candidate (Audiology) and Do Adults with Increased Fitness Levels Show Resistance to Age-Related Hearing Loss?” by Tori Stone, MCl Sc Candidate – Audiology.
Hosted by Drs. Manohar Bance and Steve Aiken, the Canadian Hearing and Auditory Research Translation (CHART) group held its first workshop in Halifax NS for leaders in audiology, otology, and hearing science from across the country to discuss priority research questions and form plans to address them.
The Canadian Infant Hearing Task Force recently released their Position Statement on Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EHDI).
Musicians earplugs are indeed flat after all and provide uniform attenuation of sound from 80 Hz to over 16,000 Hz making them ideal for playing and listening to music.
The answer to this question may surprise you.