Monday, 27 May 2019

EFAS 2019


EFAS 2019

Last week, the 14th Congress of the European Federation of Audiology Societies #EFAS2019 took place in Portugal. Below, we share some pictures of our lab members presenting at the conference and exploring beautiful Lisbon.



Tilde Van Hirtum gave a talk about Speech perception in noise by school-aged children with dyslexia: Is there a benefit of envelope enhancement? 


Sam Denys spoke about screening revolution with new handheld technology.


 Astrid van Wieringen discussed toddlers with congenital single sided deafness and a cochlear implant. 
 Can you feel the effort? Listening in ecologically relevant environments- by Annelies Devesse

 Charlotte Borgers discussed intracochlear pressure measurements to study human bone conduction perception.
Elien Van Den Borre presenting at EFAS2019




Monday, 20 May 2019

Registration for the Auditory EEG Signal Processing (AESoP) symposium is now open!


Registration for the Auditory EEG Signal Processing (AESoP) symposium is now open!

The symposium will be held from September 16 (noon) to September 18 (noon) in Leuven, Belgium. Registration deadline is September 1 and abstract submission deadline is August 1. 

The topic of the symposium is research on hearing, speech and language, making use of novel EEG or MEG signal processing. It is intended to be multidisciplinary between neuroscience, audiology and engineering, bringing people from these fields together.

The following invited speakers have confirmed: Samira Anderson (University of Maryland, USA), Behtash Babadi (University of Maryland, USA), Mathieu Bourguignon (BCBL, Spain), Joachim Gross (University of Münster, Germany), Ross Maddox (University of Rochester, USA), Myles Mc Laughlin (KU Leuven, Belgium), Nima Mesgarani (Columbia University, USA) and Sarah Verhulst (Universiteit Gent, Belgium) .

More information can be found here: https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be…/5000…/Symposia/aesop/AESOP2019

Registration can be done here: https://gbiomed.kuleuven.be/…/AESOP20…/registration2019/viewPlease note that the maximum number of participants is limited.


Thursday, 9 May 2019

Seminar Dr. Melissa Polonenko - 28 May 2019

Bekijk de webversie
KU Leuven
Invitation Research Seminar
ExpORL, Dept. Neurosciences

Cortical development in children with increasing degrees of asymmetric hearing loss who receive a cochlear implant

Dr. Melissa Polonenko

University of Rochester Medical Center

When?

Tuesday, 28 May 2019, 14:00

Where?

Seminar room HP8

O&N2, KU Leuven
Herestraat 49
B-3000 Leuven

Please reply to this email if you are planning to attend the presentation.

Wednesday, 8 May 2019

Seminar Prof. Dr. Debi Vickers - 3 June 2019

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KU Leuven
Invitation Research Seminar
ExpORL, Dept. Neurosciences
 

Defining the limits for audiometry and speech perception for adult cochlear implant indications – a NICE change to UK criteria

Prof. Dr. Debi Vickers

University College London, Ear Institute

When?

Monday, 3 June 2019, 13:30

Where?

Seminar room HP 1
O&N 2 - KU Leuven
Herestraat 49
B-3000 Leuven

 

Please reply to this email if you are planning to attend the presentation.

 
 
   

Seminar Anastasiya Starovoyt - 29 May 2019

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KU Leuven
Invitation Research Seminar
ExpORL, Dept. Neurosciences
 

First steps towards image-guided cochlear implant surgery with optical coherence tomography.

Anastasiya Starovoyt

Research Seminar

When?

Wednesday, 29 May 2019, 11:00

Where?

Seminar room HP1
O&N 2 - KU Leuven
Herestraat 49
B-3000 Leuven

Abstract

Cochlear implant (CI) is a well-established treatment for severe hearing loss. Currently, cochlear implant surgery comprises a gentle insertion of an electrode array into the cochlea, guided by macroscopic CT scanning and surgical expertise. While this approach is effective, it does not guarantee an atraumatic electrode insertion. Prevention of insertion trauma is crucial for achievement of the optimal hearing outcome in patients, especially in view of the recent trends towards preservation of residual hearing, earlier implantation and a lifetime use of renewing technologies in children. In the past decades, optical coherence tomography (OCT) has proven valuable for real-time, non-invasive, high-resolution, cross-sectional imaging of tissue microstructure in various fields of medicine. There is an upcoming interest for OCT imaging of the cochlea. Our goal is to adapt this technology for non-invasive visualization of the cochlear insertion area and thus to enable an image-guided electrode insertion. We have performed a feasibility study on OCT imaging in surgically accessed and isolated human cochleas. Currently, we are working on standardization of OCT imaging for the human cochlea. Furthermore, we are developing a 3D printed cochlear model for insertion trauma studies, based on micro-CT scans of human temporal bones. We will present the results of our feasibility study and the first prototypes of the cochlear model. In conclusion, we will discuss the planning of the next steps towards OCT-guided insertion.

Please reply to this email if you are planning to attend the presentation.