Developing a Behavioral Assay for Tinnitus Characterization
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open in viewerTinnitus– affecting ~50 million Americans– is hard to characterize because of its diverse manifestations, which hinder treatment efficacy. Our goal was to further develop a pre-clinical tinnitus characterization assay using reverse correlation, where patients render subjective perceptions from random stimuli. We evaluated stimulus generation methods: an area identified for refinement. The most accurate characterizations came from the Brimijoin Gaussian Smoothed method; 8 segments on a frequency spectrum are systematically filled with a Gaussian-shaped power distribution. This showed statistically significant improvement and had the most positive subjective feedback. In the future, this research may be incorporated into a clinical setting to improve tinnitus treatment via characterization.
- This report represents the work of one or more WPI undergraduate students submitted to the faculty as evidence of completion of a degree requirement. WPI routinely publishes these reports on its website without editorial or peer review.
- Creator
- Publisher
- Identifier
- 105726
- E-project-042723-050843
- Keyword
- Advisor
- Year
- 2023
- Date created
- 2023-04-27
- Resource type
- Major
- Source
- E-project-042723-050843
- Rights statement
- Last modified
- 2023-06-18
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- In Collection:
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Thumbnail | Title | Visibility | Embargo Release Date | Actions |
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Tinnitus_Characterization_Assay_MQP.pdf | Public | Download |
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