Date: 1/19/23
Place: LYLE 1150
Time: 10:30 - 11-20 AM Or Zoom link listed below
Speaker: Hari Bharadwaj, Assistant Professor, University of Pittsburgh
Title:
Physiological Characterization of Persistent Tinnitus
Abstract: Tinnitus is the perception of sounds (e.g., ringing, buzzing, hissing, roaring) without an external acoustic stimulus. Roughly 10 percent of the adult
population of the United States has experienced tinnitus episodes lasting at least five minutes in the past year. Furthermore, an estimated 20% of audiological visits to urban clinical centers occur with tinnitus as the primary complaint. Although age, noise
exposure, and audiometric hearing loss are risk factors for tinnitus, the connection is indirect, prompting speculation about the intervening neural processes that may be more proximally related to the percept. This presentation will consider different theoretical
accounts that have been proposed for tinnitus perception in the literature and describe preliminary data from our work in support of each. Specific aims for a planned research proposal that seeks to document the physiological characteristics of persistent
tinnitus will be discussed with the goal of obtain critical feedback from the audience.
Zoom link for remote attendees: https://purdue-edu.zoom.us/j/4326340458 Meeting
ID: 432 634 0458
The working schedule is available here: https://purdue.edu/TPAN/hearing/shrp_schedule
The titles and abstracts of the talks will be added here: https://purdue.edu/TPAN/hearing/shrp_abstracts