My latest research is now fully published at Hearing Research! ๐
https://t.co/gS5llf8Qmy
Check out how we replicated ageing as a risk factor for tinnitus - and how we concluded that the relevant ageing processes in tinnitus are different from neural mechanisms in dementia.
Thanks to my supervisor and co-author @nweisz2 for your support!๐ Also, special thanks to @LandSalzburg for funding and @uk_biobank for your work and for sharing your large amount of data with us! (8/8)
Check out our newest preprint! ๐ https://t.co/V760GtbdPY
Aging and hearing loss have been linked to dementia and tinnitus, respectively. But is there a direct influence of tinnitus on dementia risk? A thread (1/8)
We concluded that tinnitus is indeed related to aging, but not to the specific aging processes that are relevant for dementia. More research is therefore needed to disentangle these processes. (7/8)
Thanks to my co-authors @gpDemarchi, @jonasobleser, Will Sedley, @WSchlee, @JulianeSchuber2, Quirin Gehmacher, Marta Partyka, @ninasuess0605, Eugen Trinka and Sebastian Rรถsch! ๐ Special thanks to my co-author and supervisor @nweisz2 as well as @LandSalzburg for funding! (11/11)
Check out our new preprint! ๐งhttps://t.co/0BVf0ZW18M
In a one-of-a-kind manuscript we successfully replicated aberrant auditory prediction patterns in tinnitus using two independent MEG studies. A thread (1/11)
Overall, our study shows in a robust and replicable manner that individuals with tinnitus engage anticipatory auditory predictions differently compared to healthy controls. The robustness of the effect is expecially worth emphasizing despite changes of some design details (10/11)