A computer model of hearing loss

Deafness Research UK has awarded a grant to Professor Ray Meddis at the University of Essex to explore the potential of computer models of hearing for helping us to understand different kinds of hearing impairment.

[Studentship: 2007-2010]

Recent developments in computer model design have opened up a range of new and largely unexplored possibilities for understanding different kinds of hearing impairment and diagnosing the specific underlying pathology of the ear for a given patient.

Computer models are used to explain normal hearing but can also be used to predict the consequences of malfunction of any one of the numerous individual working parts of the outer, middle and inner ear. This process can be reversed by using the detailed measurement of a patient’s hearing to adjust a model so that it represents exactly what has gone wrong with the patient’s hearing.

Doctoral student Manasa Panda is a qualified clinical audiologist who is now using his clinical skills to make a range of diagnostic measurements on a number of patients and adjust the computer model to suit each individual patient. He will then check the model to see that it produces the same diagnostic results as the patient when tested on a range of performance measures.

The long term aim of the overall project is to use computer models to estimate the benefits that might be predicted from different types of hearing aid if fitted to a particular patient. The main beneficiaries of the project will therefore be the patients, although audiologists and aid dispensers will also benefit from improved methods of diagnosis and aid prescription.

The long term aim of the overall project is to use computer models to estimate the benefits that might be predicted from different types of hearing aid if fitted to a particular patient.

Deafness Research UK has awarded over £9 million in research grants. To see what we've achieved, so far, click here
 
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