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Industry News July 2020 – Remembering Mary Beth Jennings, André Gustave Joël Lafargue, CASLPO
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Industry News July 2020 – Remembering Mary Beth Jennings, André Gustave Joël Lafargue, CASLPO
CAA News July 2020 – Webinars, Editors Corner, IDA Resources
High thresholds in the TEN are likely in all cases to be associated with a poor ability to understand speech when background sounds are present.
Within our field, we are very grateful for the work that Brian Moore has done, and it is safe to say that his work has benefitted many individuals with hearing loss around the globe.
Proper scientific writing requires a keen sense of proportion, an assertive taste for parsimony and above all, elegance. This is Brian CJ Moore.
Brian wrote his PhD thesis in 1971 and he is retiring at age 75? That would be 50 years worth of new knowledge to the field of audiology. Well done! Who could ask for anything Moore?
Brian’s research has helped identify specific issues associated with using hearing aids for music. Hopefully, this knowledge can help in the development of future hearing aids that are better for music.
Brian strides over the field of psychoacoustics like a laid-back colossus, albeit one who wears socks with his sandals.
Brian’s work has had a lasting impact on me as a student, teacher, and researcher throughout my career. His contribution to the world of hearing goes well beyond one discipline and has influenced and shaped the work of many researchers and clinicians across the globe.
Brian Moore’s Auditory Perception Lab was an invigorating environment to work and Brian was then (and still is) an inspiration, balancing exquisitely designed psychophysical experiments with the development of meaningful diagnostic hearing tests and interventions for real-world applications.