Robert P. Morse
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View article: Comparison of an Implantable Middle Ear Microphone and Conventional External Microphone for Cochlear Implants: A Clinical Feasibility Study
Comparison of an Implantable Middle Ear Microphone and Conventional External Microphone for Cochlear Implants: A Clinical Feasibility Study Open
Objectives All commercially available cochlear implant (CI) systems use an external microphone and sound processor; however, external equipment carries lifestyle limitations. Although totally implantable devices using subcutaneous micropho…
View article: Noise helps cochlear implant listeners to categorize vowels
Noise helps cochlear implant listeners to categorize vowels Open
Theoretical studies demonstrate that controlled addition of noise can enhance the amount of information transmitted by a cochlear implant (CI). The present study is a proof-of-principle for whether stochastic facilitation can improve the a…
View article: Supplementary Material for: Inappropriate Use of the “Rosowski Criteria” and “Modified Rosowski Criteria” for Assessing the Normal Function of Human Temporal Bones
Supplementary Material for: Inappropriate Use of the “Rosowski Criteria” and “Modified Rosowski Criteria” for Assessing the Normal Function of Human Temporal Bones Open
Important research by Rosowski et al. [Twenty-Seventh Meeting of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology, 2004, p. 275] has led to a standard practice by the American Society for Testing Materials [West Conshohocken: ASTM Internatio…
View article: Perceptual Differences Between Low-Frequency Analog and Pulsatile Stimulation as Shown by Single- and Multidimensional Scaling
Perceptual Differences Between Low-Frequency Analog and Pulsatile Stimulation as Shown by Single- and Multidimensional Scaling Open
Cochlear-implant users who have experienced both analog and pulsatile sound coding strategies often have strong preferences for the sound quality of one over the other. This suggests that analog and pulsatile stimulation may provide differ…
View article: Unraveling the essential role of CysK in CDI toxin activation
Unraveling the essential role of CysK in CDI toxin activation Open
Significance Contact-dependent growth inhibition (CDI) systems produce toxins that inhibit competing bacteria and immunity proteins that protect against self-inhibition. The CDI toxin deployed by Escherichia coli 536 is a nuclease that onl…