View clinical trials related to Hearing.
Filter by:Recognition of speech sounds is accomplished through the use of adjacent sounds in time, in what is termed acoustic context. The frequency and temporal properties of these contextual sounds play a large role in recognition of human speech. Historically, most research on both speech perception and sound perception in general examine sounds out-of-context, or presented individually. Further, these studies have been conducted independently of each other with little connection across labs, across sounds, etc. These approaches slow the progress in understanding how listeners with hearing difficulties use context to recognize speech and how their hearing aids and/or cochlear implants might be modified to improve their perception. This research has three main goals. First, the investigators predict that performance in speech sound recognition experiments will be related when testing the same speech frequencies or the same moments in time, but that performance will not be related in further comparisons across speech frequencies or at different moments in time. Second, the investigators predict that adding background noise will make this contextual speech perception more difficult, and that these difficulties will be more severe for listeners with hearing loss. Third, the investigators predict that cochlear implant users will also use surrounding sounds in their speech recognition, but with key differences than healthy-hearing listeners owing to the sound processing done by their implants. In tandem with these goals, the investigators will use computer models to simulate how neurons respond to speech sounds individually and when surrounded by other sounds.
The effect of a removable complete denture and the insertion of one implant in the lower jaw and the loading of this implant on the hearing ability of patients will be studied, so the hearing ability will be measured by using the PTA test for 30 patients in the age of 50-65 years old. The hearing ability measurement will be done in 4 different periods of time. Before and after using the denture, before and after the implant insertion, and after loading the implant with the same complete denture. The implant surgery will be done in two phases: the first is to insert the implant in the bone and cover it by suturing until it integrates with the bone after 3 months, the second is to start the process of loading the implant with the denture.