[HTML][HTML] The neuroscience of tinnitus: understanding abnormal and normal auditory perception

JJ Eggermont, LE Roberts - Frontiers in systems neuroscience, 2012 - frontiersin.org
Ranulfo Romo, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico et al., 2012). Attentional
effects on the auditory steady state response in tinnitus patients were deemed unlikely …

The auditory cortex and tinnitus–a review of animal and human studies

JJ Eggermont - European Journal of Neuroscience, 2015 - Wiley Online Library
Tinnitus is the sound heard in the absence of physical sound sources external or internal to
the body. Tinnitus never occurs in isolation; it typically develops after hearing loss, and not …

Tinnitus-related neural activity: theories of generation, propagation, and centralization

AJ Noreña, BJ Farley - Hearing research, 2013 - Elsevier
The neuroscience of tinnitus represents an ideal model to explore central issues in brain
functioning such as the formation of auditory percepts, in addition to opening up new …

Tinnitus and neural plasticity (Tonndorf lecture at XIth international tinnitus seminar, Berlin, 2014)

JJ Eggermont - Hearing research, 2015 - Elsevier
Ten years ago, animal models of noise-induced hearing loss predicted three cortical neural
correlates of tinnitus resulting from noise-induced hearing loss: increased spontaneous …

The neuroscience of tinnitus

JJ Eggermont, LE Roberts - Trends in neurosciences, 2004 - cell.com
Tinnitus is an auditory phantom sensation (ringing of the ears) experienced when no
external sound is present. Most but not all cases are associated with hearing loss induced …

Tinnitus does not interfere with auditory and speech perception

FG Zeng, M Richardson, K Turner - Journal of Neuroscience, 2020 - Soc Neuroscience
Tinnitus is a sound heard by 15% of the general population in the absence of any external
sound. Because external sounds can sometimes mask tinnitus, tinnitus is assumed to affect …

Tinnitus: maladaptive auditory–somatosensory plasticity

C Wu, RA Stefanescu, DT Martel, SE Shore - Hearing research, 2016 - Elsevier
Tinnitus, the phantom perception of sound, is physiologically characterized by an increase in
spontaneous neural activity in the central auditory system. However, as tinnitus is often …

Role of auditory cortex in noise-and drug-induced tinnitus

JJ Eggermont - 2008 - ASHA
Method Neurophysiological findings in cat auditory cortex following noise trauma or the
application of salicylate and quinine, all expected to induce tinnitus, were reviewed. Those …

[HTML][HTML] Tinnitus does not require macroscopic tonotopic map reorganization

DRM Langers, E Kleine, P Dijk - Frontiers in systems neuroscience, 2012 - frontiersin.org
The pathophysiology underlying tinnitus, a hearing disorder characterized by the chronic
perception of phantom sound, has been related to aberrant plastic reorganization of the …

An integrative model of tinnitus based on a central gain controlling neural sensitivity

AJ Noreña - Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2011 - Elsevier
The purpose of the current review is to propose a model highlighting the putative
connections between hearing loss and the phantom perception of tinnitus (tinnitus being …