The neural mechanisms of tinnitus: a perspective from functional magnetic resonance imaging

J Hu, J Cui, JJ Xu, X Yin, Y Wu, J Qi - Frontiers in neuroscience, 2021 - frontiersin.org
Tinnitus refers to sound perception in the absence of external sound stimulus. It has become
a worldwide problem affecting all age groups especially the elderly. Tinnitus often …

Tinnitus and the brain: a review of functional and anatomical magnetic resonance imaging studies

S Shahsavarani, RA Khan, FT Husain - … of the ASHA Special Interest Groups, 2019 - ASHA
Purpose The tinnitus patient population is inherently heterogeneous. Although tinnitus often
co-occurs with hearing loss and is more frequent among elderly people, it affects all age …

Intrinsic network activity in tinnitus investigated using functional MRI

AM Leaver, TK Turesky… - Human brain …, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
Tinnitus is an increasingly common disorder in which patients experience phantom auditory
sensations, usually ringing or buzzing in the ear. Tinnitus pathophysiology has been …

Cortico-limbic morphology separates tinnitus from tinnitus distress

AM Leaver, A Seydell-Greenwald… - Frontiers in systems …, 2012 - frontiersin.org
Tinnitus is a common auditory disorder characterized by a chronic ringing or buzzing “in the
ear.” Despite the auditory-perceptual nature of this disorder, a growing number of studies …

Auditory–limbic interactions in chronic tinnitus: Challenges for neuroimaging research

AM Leaver, A Seydell-Greenwald, JP Rauschecker - Hearing research, 2016 - Elsevier
Tinnitus is a widespread auditory disorder affecting approximately 10–15% of the
population, often with debilitating consequences. Although tinnitus commonly begins with …

Tinnitus neural mechanisms and structural changes in the brain: the contribution of neuroimaging research

P Simonetti, J Oiticica - International archives of …, 2015 - thieme-connect.com
Introduction Tinnitus is an abnormal perception of sound in the absence of an external
stimulus. Chronic tinnitus usually has a high impact in many aspects of patients' lives, such …

Auditory resting-state network connectivity in tinnitus: a functional MRI study

A Maudoux, P Lefebvre, JE Cabay, A Demertzi… - PloS one, 2012 - journals.plos.org
The underlying functional neuroanatomy of tinnitus remains poorly understood. Few studies
have focused on functional cerebral connectivity changes in tinnitus patients. The aim of this …

Review and perspective on brain bases of tinnitus

FT Husain, RA Khan - Journal of the Association for Research in …, 2023 - Springer
In advancing our understanding of tinnitus, some of the more impactful contributions in the
past two decades have come from human brain imaging studies, specifically the idea of both …

Brain regions responsible for tinnitus distress and loudness: a resting-state FMRI study

T Ueyama, T Donishi, S Ukai, Y Ikeda, M Hotomi… - PloS one, 2013 - journals.plos.org
Subjective tinnitus is characterized by the perception of phantom sound without an external
auditory stimulus. We hypothesized that abnormal functionally connected regions in the …

Neural plasticity of mild tinnitus: an fMRI investigation comparing those recently diagnosed with tinnitus to those that had tinnitus for a long period of time

JR Carpenter-Thompson, SA Schmidt… - Neural …, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
Objectives. The aim of the study was to compare differences in neural correlates of tinnitus in
adults with recent onset and others who had the disorder for longer than a year. Design. A …