Dr Venema, the Bob Ross of the audiology world!! Such a calming, extremely informative, and passionate man. Thank you for all the work you have done and continue to do
Hahahaha I'm watching this for absolutely no reason. But what a fantastic lecturer. Totally understands how to make this content interesting and understandable.
Thank you to all the people who spend their lives doing research on things this detailed and continue researching to get better quality of living for others. Thank you Dr V for this information.
This is an excellent presentation! Dr. Ted, you are a natural teacher. I am studying for the Praxis exam and you are making things make more sense to me. Much gratitude!
Hi, your videos are amazing, thank you so much. I was wondering whethet I could find some info on the viewing order. Most lessons start with "as we've seen in last video", but I don't seem to find the first one to start there. Thank you.
Thanks, very interesting explanation. I came here because I wanted to understand a phenomena experienced by some people called The Hum which is where they hear/feel a very low frequency vibration that sounds like a diesel engine idling, a very low hum that also has a pulsating, throbbing or phasing effect. I am 60 and I have this. It sounds almost like an actual physical vibration within my head. At one time I really believed it to be a real external noise, but now I think it is an internal sound as my wife says she cannot hear the sound herself. I thought perhaps it was a form of tinnitus. I also have high frequency tinnitus. I wondered if The Hum could be a result of OAE's somehow. But according to your explanation here, OAE is NOT tinnitus. So can you explain what causes this Hum that I hear?
@Colette Welch It could be due to 1)Lip reading 2)Better hearing in the other ear. 80 dB HL - will DEFINITELY be mixed, ie. with both conductive and SN components, hence not possible for the person to have good speech recognition if HL is present in both ears.
@Harsha Vardan - 1) Lip reading skills is only relevant when you are not doing MLV and the opportunity to lip read is present. 2) While a mixed hearing loss is a likely scenario, I'll give you more information. The patient has an asymmetric HL with no measurable responses on one side. SRS have remained above 80% range via recording at MCL.
future SLP here, thanks for helping me with my audiology class :) much appreciated
Dr Venema, the Bob Ross of the audiology world!! Such a calming, extremely informative, and passionate man. Thank you for all the work you have done and continue to do
Hahahaha I'm watching this for absolutely no reason. But what a fantastic lecturer. Totally understands how to make this content interesting and understandable.
Dr Ted you are simply amazingly. I end up smiling at the end of all your lectures. God bless you
Thank you to all the people who spend their lives doing research on things this detailed and continue researching to get better quality of living for others. Thank you Dr V for this information.
At any rate, I believe I will do well on my midterm
This is an excellent presentation! Dr. Ted, you are a natural teacher. I am studying for the Praxis exam and you are making things make more sense to me. Much gratitude!
Your explanation is outstanding..Thank you so much. As an audiology student, this is very useful.
Thanks a lot Doc.the explanation is on point.I am now less scared for my daughter's OAE test end of this month.thanks again.
this dr is a god in hearing science...
I love your knowledge and enthusiasm!
Thanks for making me smarter.
you are amazing dr Ted
You are a life saver! You make this so easy to understand. Thank you
Excelent. I have been waiting an explanation like this one for several months!!!!
Crystal clear explanation. Really enjoyed
Omg what a perfect justification is that !!!!
very well explained...
i am impressed by the way you talk
Dr. Ted is a rockstar straight up
Thanks for your clear & helpful explanation!
Thank you very much! very useful! I couldn't understand my book and now it all makes sense
thanks Dr. Ted u have been a great help
U r really a great teacher,a hard working...thank u for the nice video
This as the best explanation Ive heard! thank you dr ted :D
Thank you - Please make more!
Great experience and details! Thank you 🙏
Thank you. It's very informative
thank you, dr. ted
Excellent ! It's very helpful explanation. Thank you so much Dr. Venema :)
Great explanations!
Amazing! please make one for BERA too
Awesome! So helpful! Thank you very much!
So helpful! Thank you so much.
I wish you the best
great explanation! thank you!
Thank you, you explained it perfectly
Very well explained
You are an amazing teacher! You made learning about this really fun. (I like that you use a little bit of sign-langage when you talk.) haha!
hi dr ted i hope you make a video on abr test.., and how it can detect different ear pathologies.., thank you
Very comprehensive
simply awesome !!
Hi, your videos are amazing, thank you so much. I was wondering whethet I could find some info on the viewing order. Most lessons start with "as we've seen in last video", but I don't seem to find the first one to start there. Thank you.
great really exiting
This was really helpful, cheers :)
Thank you very much! Can we see a video about the vestibular system and nystagmus, please!
you are amazing
very GOOD! and very clear also :)
Great explanantion......... thanks a lot sir :)
Tq sir
amazing
Great thank!
Thanks, very interesting explanation. I came here because I wanted to understand a phenomena experienced by some people called The Hum which is where they hear/feel a very low frequency vibration that sounds like a diesel engine idling, a very low hum that also has a pulsating, throbbing or phasing effect. I am 60 and I have this. It sounds almost like an actual physical vibration within my head. At one time I really believed it to be a real external noise, but now I think it is an internal sound as my wife says she cannot hear the sound herself. I thought perhaps it was a form of tinnitus. I also have high frequency tinnitus. I wondered if The Hum could be a result of OAE's somehow. But according to your explanation here, OAE is NOT tinnitus. So can you explain what causes this Hum that I hear?
daaaaaaamnnn you need to lecture more
A 1.22 ratio will sound somewhere between a minor and major third interval. Interesting
awsm
Why would someone have solely inner hair cell damage? Ototoxicity?
Yeah I think that's possible. It can also occur in ANSD.
Good
I have a specific question. If someone presents good speech recognition with an 80 dB HL, what do you suppose the HL origin may be?
@Colette Welch It could be due to 1)Lip reading 2)Better hearing in the other ear. 80 dB HL - will DEFINITELY be mixed, ie. with both conductive and SN components, hence not possible for the person to have good speech recognition if HL is present in both ears.
@Harsha Vardan - 1) Lip reading skills is only relevant when you are not doing MLV and the opportunity to lip read is present. 2) While a mixed hearing loss is a likely scenario, I'll give you more information. The patient has an asymmetric HL with no measurable responses on one side. SRS have remained above 80% range via recording at MCL.