Spectral integration of speech bands in normal-hearing and hearing-impaired listeners. (73/284)

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Effects of assistance dogs on persons with mobility or hearing impairments: a pilot study. (74/284)

Service dogs help persons with mobility impairments by retrieving items and performing other tasks. Hearing dogs alert persons with hearing impairments to environmental sounds. We conducted a pre-post, wait list-controlled pilot study to assess the impact of the dogs on the lives of recipients. Participants were recruited through two assistance dog training organizations and completed an initial questionnaire packet. The Experimental group completed another packet 6 months after receiving a dog. The Control group completed a second packet 6 months after the initial data collection. On average, dog recipients were very satisfied with their assistance dogs. Both service and hearing dog recipients reduced their dependence on other persons. Service dog recipients reduced hours of paid assistance. No other significant change occurred in various standardized outcome measures. Assistance dogs had a major positive impact on the lives of recipients. More appropriate measurement instruments are needed to capture the impact of these dogs.  (+info)

The Hearing-Dependent Daily Activities Scale to evaluate impact of hearing loss in older people. (75/284)

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Translation of the multidimensional health locus of control scales for users of American sign language. (76/284)

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The role of temporal fine structure processing in pitch perception, masking, and speech perception for normal-hearing and hearing-impaired people. (77/284)

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Heritage of army audiology and the road ahead: the Army Hearing Program. (78/284)

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Pitch perception and auditory stream segregation: implications for hearing loss and cochlear implants. (79/284)

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Dual language use in sign-speech bimodal bilinguals: fNIRS brain-imaging evidence. (80/284)

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