109 results match your criteria: "Oldenburg University[Affiliation]"

Investigating Differences in Preferred Noise Reduction Strength Among Hearing Aid Users.

Trends Hear

September 2016

Cluster of Excellence Hearing4all, Oldenburg, Germany Hörzentrum Oldenburg GmbH, Oldenburg, Germany.

Even though hearing aid (HA) users can respond very differently to noise reduction (NR) processing, knowledge about possible drivers of this variability (and thus ways of addressing it in HA fittings) is sparse. The current study investigated differences in preferred NR strength among HA users. Participants were groups of experienced users with clear preferences ("NR lovers"; N = 14) or dislikes ("NR haters"; N = 13) for strong NR processing, as determined in two earlier studies.

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This study assessed the effects of hearing aid (HA) experience on how quickly a participant can grasp the meaning of an acoustic sentence-in-noise stimulus presented together with two similar pictures that either correctly (target) or incorrectly (competitor) depict the meaning conveyed by the sentence. Using an eye tracker, the time taken by the participant to start fixating the target (the processing time) was measured for two levels of linguistic complexity (low vs. high) and three HA conditions: clinical linear amplification (National Acoustic Laboratories-Revised), single-microphone noise reduction with National Acoustic Laboratories-Revised, and linear amplification ensuring a sensation level of ≥ 15 dB up to at least 4 kHz for the speech material used here.

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Background: A better understanding of individual differences in hearing aid (HA) outcome is a prerequisite for more personalized HA fittings. Currently, knowledge of how different user factors relate to response to directional processing (DIR) and noise reduction (NR) is sparse.

Purpose: To extend a recent study linking preference for DIR and NR to pure-tone average hearing thresholds (PTA) and cognitive factors by investigating if (1) equivalent links exist for different types of DIR and NR, (2) self-reported noise sensitivity and personality can account for additional variability in preferred DIR and NR settings, and (3) spatial target speech configuration interacts with individual DIR preference.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluates the effectiveness of internal iliac artery ligation (IIAL) in treating postpartum hemorrhage caused by uterine atony, retroperitoneal hematoma, and placenta abnormalities.
  • Among 52 women assessed, success rates for IIAL were high, with 91% for primary and 71.4% for secondary IIAL in uterine atony cases.
  • The addition of IIAL can potentially reduce hysterectomy rates and does not negatively impact fertility outcomes, even when used alongside other uterus-sparing techniques.
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Spatial deficits are frequent after brain damage, particularly right hemisphere stroke. Visual judgments of line orientation (LINE) are often impaired after right parietal lesions. Perception of line orientation is an important visuoperceptual component of visuoconstructive capacities.

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The auditory brainstem response (ABR) is a sound-evoked noninvasively measured electrical potential representing the sum of neuronal activity in the auditory brainstem and midbrain. ABR peak amplitudes and latencies are widely used in human and animal auditory research and for clinical screening. The binaural interaction component (BIC) of the ABR stands for the difference between the sum of the monaural ABRs and the ABR obtained with binaural stimulation.

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Aging effects on the binaural interaction component of the auditory brainstem response in the Mongolian gerbil: Effects of interaural time and level differences.

Hear Res

July 2016

Cluster of Excellence Hearing4all, Animal Physiology and Behavior Group, Department for Neuroscience, School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Oldenburg University, 26111, Oldenburg, Germany. Electronic address:

The effect of interaural time difference (ITD) and interaural level difference (ILD) on wave 4 of the binaural and summed monaural auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) as well as on the DN1 component of the binaural interaction component (BIC) of the ABR in young and old Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) was investigated. Measurements were made at a fixed sound pressure level (SPL) and a fixed level above visually detected ABR threshold to compensate for individual hearing threshold differences. In both stimulation modes (fixed SPL and fixed level above visually detected ABR threshold) an effect of ITD on the latency and the amplitude of wave 4 as well as of the BIC was observed.

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Studies in healthy individuals indicate a significant influence of rotating visual motion on judgments of the subjective visual vertical (SVV). Moreover, sensory stimulation manoeuvres like horizontal coherent dot movement significantly modulate horizontal spatial deficits in patients with rightsided stroke. Here, we investigated whether rotational coherent dot movement (RCDM) modulates spatial orientation deficits of the SVV in the roll plane in right hemispheric stroke.

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On the Interplay Between Cochlear Gain Loss and Temporal Envelope Coding Deficits.

Adv Exp Med Biol

September 2016

Medizinische Physik and Cluster of Excellence Hearing4all, Department of Medical Physics and Acoustics, Oldenburg University, Carl-von-Ossietzky Strasse 9-11, 26129, Oldenburg, Germany.

Hearing impairment is characterized by two potentially coexisting sensorineural components: (i) cochlear gain loss that yields wider auditory filters, elevated hearing thresholds and compression loss, and (ii) cochlear neuropathy, a noise-induced component of hearing loss that may impact temporal coding fidelity of supra-threshold sound. This study uses a psychoacoustic amplitude modulation (AM) detection task in quiet and multiple noise backgrounds to test whether these aspects of hearing loss can be isolated in listeners with normal to mildly impaired hearing ability. Psychoacoustic results were compared to distortion-product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) thresholds and envelope-following response (EFR) measures.

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Auditory Brainstem Response Latency in Noise as a Marker of Cochlear Synaptopathy.

J Neurosci

March 2016

Center for Computational Neuroscience and Neural Technology, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215.

Unlabelled: Evidence from animal and human studies suggests that moderate acoustic exposure, causing only transient threshold elevation, can nonetheless cause "hidden hearing loss" that interferes with coding of suprathreshold sound. Such noise exposure destroys synaptic connections between cochlear hair cells and auditory nerve fibers; however, there is no clinical test of this synaptopathy in humans. In animals, synaptopathy reduces the amplitude of auditory brainstem response (ABR) wave-I.

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German Registry for Acute Aortic Dissection Type A: Structure, Results, and Future Perspectives.

Thorac Cardiovasc Surg

March 2017

Department of Vascular Surgery, Vascular Center Berlin-Brandenburg, Academic Hospital Hubertus, Berlin, Germany.

The German Registry for Acute Aortic Dissection Type A (GERAADA) as an international registry for acute aortic dissection type A (AADA) offers a unique opportunity to answer questions regarding acute dissections that cannot be answered by single institution's database alone. GERAADA was started in 2006 by the German Society for Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (GSTCVS) and has collected more than 3,300 AADA patients' data from 56 centers in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland up to now. In the second generated validated dataset comprising the years from 2006 to 2010, 2,137 patients were surgically treated for AADA with an overall 30-day mortality of 16.

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Expression of PTEN and β-Catenin and Their Relationship With Clinicopathological and Prognostic Factors in Endometrioid Type Endometrial Cancer.

Int J Gynecol Cancer

March 2016

*Division of Gynecologic Oncology, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Istanbul University Cerrahpasa Medical Faculty; †Clinic of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Şişli Hamidiye Etfal Training and Research Hospital; ‡Department of Pathology, Istanbul University Cerrahpasa Medical Faculty, Istanbul, Turkey; and §Obstetrics and Gynecology, Klinikum Oldenburg University, Oldenburg, Germany.

Objective: The aim of this study was to investigate rates of expression of PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10) and β-catenin and their relationship with clinicopathological and prognostic factors in endometrioid type endometrial cancer (EC).

Methods And Materials: PTEN and β-catenin expressions of 59 operated patients with EC between January 2000 and December 2008 and followed-up until December 2014 in Cerrahpasa School of Medicine, Gynecologic Oncology Division, were evaluated retrospectively. Clinical data were obtained from patient files, and pathological data were obtained from pathology records.

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Purpose: To evaluate various aspects of two popular uterine sparing techniques, the B-Lynch uterine compression suture and Bakri balloon tamponade, in severe postpartum hemorrhage (PPH).

Methods: 21 women who underwent the Bakri balloon procedure and 24 women who underwent the B-Lynch suture as primary uterus-sparing methods, due to PPH not responding to medical treatment, were retrospectively evaluated.

Results: The success rates of the B-Lynch procedure and the Bakri balloon were 79.

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Aims: To investigate the possible pathophysiological associations between progranulin (PGRN) and preeclampsia (PE), early-onset PE (EOPE) and late-onset PE (LOPE).

Study Design: A cross-sectional study was designed to include consecutive patients with uncomplicated pregnancy (n = 28), EOPE (n = 30) and LOPE (n = 22). Maternal levels of serum PGRN were measured with the use of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit.

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Power Doppler flow mapping and four-dimensional ultrasound for evaluating tubal patency compared with laparoscopy.

Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol

December 2015

University of Alexandria, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, El Shatby Maternity University Hospital, Port-Said Street, 21526 El-Shatby, Alexandria, Egypt.

Objectives: To study the accuracy of four-dimensional (4D) ultrasound and power Doppler flow mapping in detecting tubal patency in women with sub-/infertility, and compare it with laparoscopy and chromopertubation.

Study Design: A prospective study. The study was performed in the outpatient clinic and infertility unit of a university hospital.

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Functional modeling of the human auditory brainstem response to broadband stimulation.

J Acoust Soc Am

September 2015

Center of Computational Neuroscience and Neural Technology, Boston University, 677 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA.

Population responses such as the auditory brainstem response (ABR) are commonly used for hearing screening, but the relationship between single-unit physiology and scalp-recorded population responses are not well understood. Computational models that integrate physiologically realistic models of single-unit auditory-nerve (AN), cochlear nucleus (CN) and inferior colliculus (IC) cells with models of broadband peripheral excitation can be used to simulate ABRs and thereby link detailed knowledge of animal physiology to human applications. Existing functional ABR models fail to capture the empirically observed 1.

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Releases of surgically deafened homing pigeons indicate that aural cues play a significant role in their navigational system.

J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol

October 2015

Cluster of Excellence "Hearing4all", Research Center Neurosensory Science and Department of Neuroscience, Oldenburg University, Oldenburg, Germany.

Experienced homing pigeons with extirpated cochleae and lagenae were released from six sites in upstate New York and western Pennsylvania on 17 days between 1973 and 1975 by William T. Keeton and his co-workers at Cornell University. The previously unpublished data indicate that departure directions of the operated birds were significantly different from those of sham-operated control birds (314 total), indicating that aural cues play an important part in the pigeon's navigational system.

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Individual differences reveal correlates of hidden hearing deficits.

J Neurosci

February 2015

Center for Computational Neuroscience and Neural Technology and Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215.

Clinical audiometry has long focused on determining the detection thresholds for pure tones, which depend on intact cochlear mechanics and hair cell function. Yet many listeners with normal hearing thresholds complain of communication difficulties, and the causes for such problems are not well understood. Here, we explore whether normal-hearing listeners exhibit such suprathreshold deficits, affecting the fidelity with which subcortical areas encode the temporal structure of clearly audible sound.

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Knowledge of how executive functions relate to preferred hearing aid (HA) processing is sparse and seemingly inconsistent with related knowledge for speech recognition outcomes. This study thus aimed to find out if (1) performance on a measure of reading span (RS) is related to preferred binaural noise reduction (NR) strength, (2) similar relations exist for two different, non-verbal measures of executive function, (3) pure-tone average hearing loss (PTA), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and microphone directionality (DIR) also influence preferred NR strength, and (4) preference and speech recognition outcomes are similar. Sixty elderly HA users took part.

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Effects of spontaneous otoacoustic emissions on pure-tone frequency difference limens.

J Acoust Soc Am

December 2014

Cluster of Excellence Hearing4all and Medizinische Physik, Department of Medical Physics and Acoustics, Oldenburg University, Carl von Ozzietsky Strasse 9-11, 26129 Oldenburg, Germany.

Pure-tone frequency difference limens (FDLs) have been shown to vary in the vicinity of spontaneous otoacoustic emissions (SOAEs). As lower FDLs have been observed near SOAEs when measured ipsi- and contralaterally to the emission ear, it has been proposed that prolonged ongoing stimulation of nerve cells tuned to the SOAE frequency could lead to a central oversensitivity to that frequency, hence a better frequency-discrimination ability. However, it is also known that tones close in frequency to an SOAE can "entrain" the emission to oscillate at their own frequency.

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Transmission line cochlear models: improved accuracy and efficiency.

J Acoust Soc Am

October 2014

Cluster of Excellence Hearing4all, Department of Medical Physics and Acoustics, Oldenburg University, 26111 Oldenburg, Germany

This paper presents an efficient method to compute the numerical solutions of transmission-line (TL) cochlear models, and its application on the model of Verhulst et al. The stability region of the model is extended by adopting a variable step numerical method to solve the system of ordinary differential equations that describes it, and by adopting an adaptive scheme to take in account variations in the system status within each numerical step. The presented method leads to improve simulations numerical accuracy and large computational savings, leading to employ TL models for more extensive simulations than currently possible.

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Human speech contains both auditory and visual components, processed by their respective sensory cortices. We test a simple model in which task-relevant speech information is enhanced during cortical processing. Visual speech is most important when the auditory component is uninformative.

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Archaea of the phylum Thaumarchaeota are among the most abundant prokaryotes on Earth and are widely distributed in marine, terrestrial, and geothermal environments. All studied Thaumarchaeota couple the oxidation of ammonia at extremely low concentrations with carbon fixation. As the predominant nitrifiers in the ocean and in various soils, ammonia-oxidizing archaea contribute significantly to the global nitrogen and carbon cycles.

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To study the dynamics of contour integration in the human brain, we simultaneously acquired EEG and fMRI data while participants were engaged in a passive viewing task. The stimuli were Gabor arrays with some Gabor elements positioned on the contour of an embedded shape, in three conditions: with local and global structure (perfect contour alignment), with global structure only (orthogonal orientations interrupting the alignment), or without contour. By applying JointICA to the EEG and fMRI responses of the subjects, new insights could be obtained that cannot be derived from unimodal recordings.

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In this study we tested predictions of two important theories of visual coding, contrast energy and sparse coding theory, on the dependence of population activity level and metabolic demands on spatial structure of the visual input. With carefully calibrated displays we find that in humans neither the V1 blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) response nor the initial visually evoked fields in magnetoencephalography (MEG) are sensitive to phase perturbations in photographs of natural scenes. As a control, we quantitatively show that the applied phase perturbations decrease sparseness (kurtosis) of our stimuli but preserve their root mean square (RMS) contrast.

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