Six Decades of Audiological Research
Plural Publishing Inc (Verlag)
978-1-63550-370-8 (ISBN)
As a pioneer in the field of audiology, Dr. James Jerger has been involved in cutting-edge resource throughout the development of the field. In his new text, Six Decades of Audiological Research, readers can experience the evolution of diagnostic audiology through his unique perspective. By detailing case studies from his own work over the years, Dr. Jerger gives his audience a chance to be a fly on the wall for major moments throughout the history of audiology.
In the first section of the book, Dr. Jerger relates case studies and other stories from his early years in the field, including his time at both Northwestern and the Houston Speech and Hearing Center. Then, he dives into his years at Baylor College of Medicine. In the final section, he discusses his time researching auditory event-related potentials at the University of Texas.
James Jerger, a native of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, received his PhD in audiology from Northwestern University in 1954. He remained on the NU faculty until 1961, and then moved to Gallaudet College in Washington, DC, for a brief period as Research Professor of audiology. From 1962 to 1968 he served as Director of Research at the Houston Speech and Hearing Center, and then moved to Houston's Baylor College of Medicine, where he remained for the next twenty-nine years as Professor of Audiology in the Department of Otolaryngology and Communicative Sciences, and as Chief of the Audiology and Speech Pathology Services of the Methodist Hospital. In 1997 Jerger sought, but failed to achieve, semi-retirement in the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences of the University of Texas at Dallas. Here he continues to mentor doctoral candidates in audiology as Distinguished Scholar-in-Residence.
Foreword
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Chapter 1. The Early Years
A Diagnostic Challenge
Abnormal Auditory Adaptation
Speech Audiometry
Brain Stem versus Temporal Lobe
Chapter 2. Immittance Audiometry
The Tympanogram
The Stapedius Muscle Reflex
An Educational Adventure
Chapter 3. Auditory Processing Disorder
The Birth of APD
An Account of an Interesting Patient
Chapter 4. A Once in a Lifetime Opportunity
An Important Point
History and Medical Findings
First Admission
Second Admission
Final Thoughts
Chapter 5. Binaural Hearing Aids
An Early Study
But Is the Group Representative of Everyone in It?
Binaural Interference
A Very Intact Nonagenerian
Chapter 6. Cued Listening
Group Results
Three Illustrative Individual Patients
Last Thoughts
Chapter 7. Aging and Gender Effects
Can Speech Understanding Problems in Elderly Persons be Explained by the Audiogram?
Auditory Processing Disorder versus Cognitive Decline
A Longitudinal Case Study
Some Gender Differences
Another Gender Effect - The Shape of the Audiogram
Overview
Chapter 8. Auditory Event-Related Potentials to Words
Waveforms
The Importance of Forcing a Decision
The Framework of an Auditory Event-Related Potential Procedure (AERP)
The Late Positive Component (LPC)
The Right Ear Advantage
But What About Nontarget Words?
Processing Negativity (PN)
A Clarification
Final Thoughts
Chapter 9. A Twin Study
Basic Audiometry
Behavioral Psychoacoustic Measures of Auditory Processing
Standardized Cognitive/ Linguistic Evaluations
Activation Patterns
Dichotic Listening
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Chapter 10. Odds and Ends
A Visit to Montreal
"Normal Audiometric Findings"
Simian Surgery
A Researcher's Dream
A Herculean Effort
Finis
Index
Erscheinungsdatum | 26.08.2021 |
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Zusatzinfo | 66 figures and 0 tables |
Verlagsort | San Diego |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 152 x 229 mm |
Themenwelt | Medizin / Pharmazie ► Medizinische Fachgebiete ► HNO-Heilkunde |
ISBN-10 | 1-63550-370-1 / 1635503701 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-63550-370-8 / 9781635503708 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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