Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG

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Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
XXV International
Evoked Response
Audiometry Study Group
Biennial Symposium

Final Program

21–25 MAY 2017, WARSAW, POLAND
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
XXV International
Evoked Response
Audiometry Study Group
Biennial Symposium

Final Program

21–25 MAY 2017, WARSAW, POLAND
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
OF THE INSTITUTE OF PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOLOGY OF HEARING

                                                               World Hearing Center:
                                                                is a global leader in terms of the number of performed
                                                                otorhinolaryngological surgeries and the number of
                                                                outpatient consultations (more than 200,000 con-
                                                                sultations per year),
The World Hearing Center is a modern specialized ho-            is the place where unique and highly specialized me-
spital providing medical care at the highest quality le-        dical procedures are performed, including reconstruction
vel in the fields of otolaryngology, audiology, phonia-         surgeries of congenital defects of the outer ear, treat-
trics, rehabilitation and biomedical engineering. It is         ment of profound and partial deafness with various he-
superbly equipped for research and education, and               aring implants, phonosurgeries, endoscopic sinus sur-
includes modern conference facilities. The Center con-          geries under image guidance, and many others,
ducts a wide range of research and educational activi-          employs a team of highly qualified and experienced
ties addressed to specialists from Poland and other             specialists,
countries. The Center is one of the leading medical             has state-of-the-art medical equipment and instrumen-
institutions in the field of hearing disorders treatment,       tation,
running, among others, one of the largest hearing implant       offers comfortable conditions for hospital stays,
programs in the world and performing 15,000 to 21,000           uses the most modern telemedical solutions providing
surgical procedures yearly.                                     remote consultations via the world-first National Network
                                                                of Teleaudiology.
The Center provides its patients with comprehensive dia-
gnostics, conservative treatments, and surgery for the         The team of the Institute of Physiology and Pathology
rehabilitation of:                                             of Hearing and its individual employees are winners of
  congenital and acquired malformations of the external,       numerous international and national awards.
  middle and inner ear,
  hearing, speech and balance disorders of different etio-
  logies,
  disorders of the mouth cavity, throat and larynx,
  disorders of the nose and paranasal sinuses,
  sleep disorders.

                                    Kajetany, 17 Mokra St., 05-830 Nadarzyn, Poland • intercollab@ifps.org.pl • www.ifps.org.pl
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
Contents
Welcome Messages ............................................................. 7

Worldmap IERASG Meetings ........................................... 10

IERASG Council ................................................................... 13

Organizing Committee ....................................................... 13

Organizers ............................................................................. 14

Venue ...................................................................................... 14

List of Partners ...................................................................... 14

Floorplan ................................................................................ 15

Symposium Registration and Information .................... 17

General Information ............................................................ 19

Social Program ..................................................................... 19

Scientific Program ............................................................... 21
       Timetable........................................................................... 21

       Detailed Program .............................................................. 23

       • Sunday, 21 May ............................................................. 23

       • Monday, 22 May ............................................................ 23

       • Tuesday, 23 May ............................................................ 29

       • Wednesday, 24 May ...................................................... 31

       • Thursday, 25 May .......................................................... 35

                                                                         Final Program • 5
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
President:
Prof. Henryk Skarżyński,
dr hab. med. dr h.c. (mult)

Stapes surgery:
• otosclerosis
• congenital malformations
• postraumatic damage
• tympanosclerosis
• postinflammatory damage
• postoperative failures

                                      Organizers

                              www.otosclerosis2018.com
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to invite you to the Jubilee XXV International Evo-
ked Response Audiometry Study Group (IERASG) Biennial Sym-
posium on 21–25 May 2017 in Warsaw.
    IERASG is dedicated to the fields of electrophysiology of he-
aring, audiology and related fields. The meeting is opportunity for
presentation of new scientific ideas and recent technology deve-
lopments as well as working out some standards for objective me-
asurements in audiology. We hope that this XXV Jubilee Meeting
will be special with occasion for some historical reminiscences
and summary of the impact of our group on the society.
    Warsaw is a superb location to hold a global congress – in cen-
ter of Europe, with good flight connections to major cities world-
wide and excellent congress and hotel infrastructure. With popu-
lation of 1.7 million it is the largest Polish city, a thriving economic,
political, and cultural center. It is worth spending a few days in
order to experience its unique atmosphere. The city’s diversity me-
ans that there is something for everyone. We are certain that for
participants it will be an enjoyable and enriching time.
    We are looking forward to a fascinating and productive interdi-
sciplinary meeting and exchange of knowledge.

     Prof. Henryk Skarżyński              Prof. Krzysztof Kochanek

     Chair of the XXV IERASG              Chair of the XXV IERASG
       Biennial Symposium                  Scientific Committee

                                                       Final Program • 7
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
32 Politzer
  nd

Society         2nd World
              Congress of
Meeting
           OTOLOGY
           Warsaw, Poland
       12-15 June 2019
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
Dear IERASG Colleagues

I am very pleased to welcome you all the Jubilee XXV Internatio-
nal Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group (IERASG) Biennial
Symposium in Warsaw, Poland.
    Our hosts and conference organisers, Professor Henryk Skar-
żyński, Professor Krzysztof Kochanek, Associate Professor Piotr
H. Skarżyński Associate Professor W. Wiktor Jedrzejczak have
compiled an outstanding scientific program and other activities to
commemorate the 25th meeting of “Hal’s Club” (started by Profes-
sor Hallowell Davis in 1968).
    Although IERASG is recognizing 50 years of research in the
field of evoked response audiometry, the pioneering work of ear-
ly researchers in the field continue to be relevant. The 2017 IE-
RASG scientific program shows that we are continuing to build on
the strong foundations laid down by our IERASG pioneers and to
push boundaries with new and improved applications of evoked
responses.
    The program for the Jubilee XXV IERASG Biennial Symposium
presents new ideas and research findings across the whole range
of auditory evoked responses, spanning the auditory and vesti-
bular system, from the inner ear to the cortex. Thank you for your
hard work in undertaking this research and bringing this new infor-
mation to the IERASG Symposium.
    I look forward to spending time with you all and hope our new
registrants and experienced IERASG participants will enjoy this
special opportunity to meet new and old friends, share ideas and
learn about advances in this important field in a beautiful setting.
We are united in our interest in supporting each other’s efforts
around the world to push the boundaries of evoked response re-
search in the auditory system in order to advance our scientific
understanding and improve the wellbeing of people with hearing
and balance problems.
    Wishing you all every success for the conference.

                                   Suzanne Purdy

                                    IERSAG Chair

                                                   Final Program • 9
Final Program XXV International Evoked Response Audiometry Study Group Biennial Symposium - IERASG
WORLDMAP
IERASG
MEETINGS

                                                        2001
                                                        2001 Vancouver,
                                                             Vancouver, Canada
                                                                        Canada

                                                            1993
                                                            1993 Park City, United
                                                                 Park City, United States
                                                                                   States

                                                                            1997
                                                                            1997 Memphis,
                                                                                 Memphis, United
                                                                                          United States
                                                                                                 States

                                                                                     1983
                                                                                     1983 Ottawa,
                                                                                          Ottawa, Canada
                                                                                                  Canada

2017 – Chair: Skarzynski H., Kochanek K.,
2015 – Chair: Kim, L-S. and Lee, J.H.
                                                          1979
                                                          1979 CA,
                                                               CA, United
                                                                   United States
                                                                          States
2013 – Chair: Fowler, C.F. and Cone, B.
2011 – Chair: Tavartkiladze, G.
                                                                                                                              2003
                                                                                                                              2003 Ten
                                                                                                                                   Ten
                                                                                   1987
                                                                                   1987 Charlottesville,
                                                                                        Charlottesville, United
                                                                                                         United States
                                                                                                                States
2009 – Chair: Chapchap, M.J.
2007 – Chair: Butinar, D.
2005 – Chair: Perez-Abalo, M.C.
2003 – Chair: Barajas de Prat, J.J.                                              2005
                                                                                 2005 Havana,
                                                                                      Havana, Cuba
                                                                                              Cuba
2001 – Chair: Stapells, D.R.
1999 – Chair: Laukli, E.
1997 – Chair: Gould, H.J. and Mendel, M.I.                                 2005
                                                                           2005 New Orleans, United
                                                                                New Orleans, United States
                                                                                                    States
1995 – Chair: Collet, L. and Durrant, J.D.
1993 – Chair: McPherson, D.L.,
1991 – Chair: Colletti, V. and Vidi, I.
1989 – Chair: Funasaka, S.
1987 – Chair: Ruth, R.A. and Durrant, J.D.
1985 – Chair: Finkenzeller, P. and Spreng, M.
1983 – Chair: Picton, T.W.,
1981 – Chair: Antonelli, A.R. and Baroni, A                                                                2009
                                                                                                           2009 Rio
                                                                                                                Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
                                                                                                                    de Janeiro, Brazil
1979 – Chair: Gerber, S.E. and Mendel, M.I., Santa B.
1977 – Chair: Sohmer, H.
1975 – Chair: Beagley, H.A.
1973 – Bordeaux, France
1971 – Vienna, Austria
1970 – Freiburg/Breisgau, Germany (No. 1)

10 • IERASG 2017
1975    London, United Kongdom

         1981      Bergamo, Italy

                1971   Vienna, Austria

                  1999    Tromso, Norway

          1985      Erlangen, Germany

                               2011    Moscow, Russia
                                                         2015   Busan, Korea
        1970     Freiburg/Breisgau, Germany

                                                                1989   Tokyo, Japan

                            1977      Jerusalem,Israel

                  2017    Warsaw, Poland

      1975      Lyon, France

nerife, Spain

            2007     Bled, Slovenia

           1991     Terme Di Comano, Italy

 1973    Bordeaux, France

                                                                                      Final Program • 11
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    12 • IERASG 2017
IERASG Council
Officers:
Chair: Suzanne C. Purdy, New Zealand
Vice Chair: Andy Beynon, Netherlands
Treasurer: Susan Small, Canada
Secretary: Martin Walger, Germany
Membership Secretary: David McPherson, USA & Canada
Website Manager: W. Wiktor Jedrzejczak, Poland

Council:
Jose Barajas, Spain                                        Lee-Suk Kim, Korea
Steven Bell, United Kingdom                                Krzysztof Kochanek, Poland
Robert Burkard, USA                                        Guy Lightfoot, United Kingdom
Monica Chapchap, Brazil                                    Ozcan Ozdamar, USA
Barbara Cone,USA                                           Marilyn C. Perez-Abalo, Cuba
Cynthia G. Fowler, USA                                     David Purcell, Canada
Andrew Dimitrijevic, USA                                   Joseph Pytel, Hungary
Ferdinando Grandori, Italy                                 Mridula Sharma, Australia
Herbert Jay Gould, USA                                     Yvonne S. Sininger, USA
Kimitaka Kaga, Japan                                       George A. Tavartkiladze, Russia

Organizing Committee
Chair of the Symposium
Prof. Henryk Skarżyński,
Director of the Institute of Physiology and Pathology of Hearing

Chair of the Scientific Committee
Prof. Krzysztof Kochanek,
Scientific Secretary of the Institute of Physiology and Pathology of Hearing

Chair of the Organizing Committee
Assoc Prof. W. Wiktor Jędrzejczak,
Institute of Physiology and Pathology of Hearing

Secretary of the Organizing Committee
Ass Prof. Piotr H. Skarżyński,
Institute of Physiology and Pathology of Hearing

Organizing Team:
Nikola Brodowska, Łukasz Bruski, Sylwia Bujska, Jolan-     Michaluk, Grzegorz Michałek, Malwina Miechowska,
ta Chyłkiewicz, Ewa Cyluk, Damian Czajkowski, Paweł        Marta Moskalik, Artur Muras, Maciej Nowicki, Rafał
Czarnecki, Ewelina Czerwińska, Paweł Doliński, Jo-         Okrasa, Aneta Olkowska, Dominika Omen, Izabela
anna Dudzic, Ewa Gałęska, Andrzej Graniewski, Piotr        Pajdała-Kusińska, Irina Pierzyńska, Krzysztof Płochoc-
JaneczekMarta Jarosz, Barbara Kaczyńska, Aleksandra        ki, Arkadiusz Rupiewicz, Agata Szczygielska, Sebastian
Knaś, Renata Korneluk, Tomasz Kos, Magdalena Kozieł,       Szymański, Lech Śliwa, Rafał Śliwiński, Iwona Toma-
Paulina Kruszewska, Andrzej Kuca, Aneta Kulińska,          szewska, Paweł Waluszko, Olga Wanatowska, Kinga
Andrzej Lechowicz, Maciej Ludwikowski, Monika Ma-          Wołujewicz, Joanna Zagrodzka, Aleksandra Zalewska,
tejczyk, Mirosław Mazur, Monika Miąskiewicz, Paweł         Magda Żelazowska

                                                                                              Final Program • 13
Organizers

Venue
Warsaw Marriott Hotel
Al. Jerozolimskie 65/79, Warsaw 00-697, Poland.

In strict city centre, next to the Central Railway Station
and vis-à-vis with the Palace of Culture (Pałac Kultury),
makes it easy to experience the best of Warsaw. Its 2,600
m2 of high-tech conference spaces in up to 20 flexible
event rooms guarantee smooth running of the congress
and convenient accessibility of all sessions.

List of Partners
Platinum Partner

Golden Partner

Silver Partners

Partners

14 • IERASG 2017
Floorplan
Level 2

                                                           Lilla Weneda Restaurant
                 KOMETA

      Toilets

      Toilets

      SYRENA

     Congress
      Office

      WAWEL                                                                                                  Lifts
                                                                                                                                                                                Executive
     Speakers’                                                                                                                                                                   Lounge
      Room

                                                                                              Parmizzanos’s
                                                                                                                                                                      Toilets
                                                                  Congress Registration

          GRAND BALLROOM                  GRAND BALLROOM
                DEF                            ABC                                                                                                                                 WARS

                                                                                                                                                          Cloakroom
                                                                                                                                                                      Toilets
                                                                                                EXHIBITION
                                                                                                  AREA
                                                                                                                                                                                   SAWA
                                                                                                                                                                                  Council
                                                                                                                                                                                  Meeting
                                                                                          EXHIBITION AREA

Level 3
                                                                                                                                                         WC

                                                                                                CHOPIN
                                                                                                                                       EXHIBITION AREA

                                                                                                   LIFTS                                                          CONGRESS
                                                                                                                                                                    HALL

                                                                                           EXHIBITION AREA

                 BALTIC BALLROOM
                                                                                                                     EXHIBITION AREA

                                                                                          EXHIBITION
                                                               WC                           AREA

                                                                                                                                                                                   ODRA

                                                                                                             BOARD
                                   NYSA                       KOPERNIK                     WISŁA
                                                                                                             ROOM

                                                                                                                                                                                          Final Program • 15
Symposium Registration and Information
Symposium office and speakers’ room                        Symposium Badges
working hours                                              Brown – Regular Participant
Sunday, 21 May                    8:00 – 18:00             Grey – Partners
Monday, 22 May                    8:00 – 18:00             Coral – Organizer
Tuesday, 23 May                   8:00 – 12:00             Purple – Accompanying person
Wednesday, 24 May                 8:00 – 18:00             Blue – Media
Thursday, 25 May                  8:00 – 12:00             Orange – One-day Symposium Pass

Attention presenters: please bring your slides to the      Presentations
speaker’s room on a USB flash drive at least 2 hours be-   Oral presentations
fore the start of your session.                            Slides must be prepared in format compatible with Mic-
                                                           rosoft PowerPoint, Windows Version 7 and delivered to
Symposium registration desk working hours                  the speaker’s room on a USB flash drive not later than
Sunday, 21 May                    8:00 – 18:00             2 hours before the start of your session during the Sym-
Monday, 22 May                    8:00 – 18:00             posium Office working hours.
Tuesday, 23 May                   8:00 – 17:00
Wednesday, 24 May                 8:00 – 12:00             Posters
                                                           Posters for the first poster session must be mounted on
On-site registration                                       Monday May 22 and removed at Tuesday May 23.
Regular fee                                   660 EUR      Posters for the second poster session must be mounted
Students                                      200 EUR      on Tuesday May 23 or Wednesday May 24 morning and
                                                           removed at Thursday May 25.
On-site payments can be made by credit card or cash        Poster discussion will take place in front of the posters.
in EUR or equivalent in PLN (exchange rate: National       Presenters should stand next to their posters during
Bank of Poland official rate).                             poster presentation session.
                                                           Poster Room:                        Grand Ballroom ABC
Registration fee includes                                  Poster Session I:              May 22 (Mon) 17:00-18:00
• membership dues,                                         Poster Session II:             May 24 (Wed) 17:00-18:00
• attendance to scientific sessions,
• Program, Abstract book and credentials,                  Language
• coffee breaks and lunches for four days as well as a     The official Symposium language is English.
   welcoming cocktail and farewell dinner party,
• additional social event (a tour of Warsaw and/or to      First Aid
   neighboring historical sites, concerts).                For medical assistance or emergency service please con-
                                                           tact our staff at the Symposium Office.

                                                                                                Final Program • 17
The TRV
            Repositioning
                     Chair                                                                       State of the art chair for
                                                                                                 diagnosing and treating
                                                                                                 Benign Paroxysmal
                                                                                                 Positional Vertigo (BPPV)

                                                     User-friendly features
                                                     • Rotation in the exact plane               • Diagnosis and treatment of BPPV
                                                       of each canal                               in all 6 semicircular canals
                                                     • Easy operation
                                                     • Safe for all patients                     • Stimulation in the exact plane of
                                                     • Manually controlled                         each semicircular canal
                                                     • Effective rehabilitation
                                                                                                 • Add kinetic energy for better
                                                                                                   treatment results
                                                                                                 • Pre-set movements and positions
                                                                                                 • Comfortable for both patient and
                                                                                                   user
                                                                                                 interacoustics.com

                                                                                                      “The TRV Chair is a true revolution
                                                                                                      within the treatment of dizziness
                                                                                                      as more than half of all patients
                                                                                                      presenting in our clinic with dizziness
                                                                                                      suffer from BPPV”

                                                                                                      Mads Klokker,
                                                                                                      Head of ORL, H & N Surgery and
                                                                                                      Audiology, Assoc. Prof., Rigshospitalet,
                                                                                                      University of Copenhagen

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General Information
Transport                                                     rants and shops usually display signs indicating what
Warsaw Fryderyk Chopin Airport is located in the              cards they accept.
south-west part of Warsaw, approximately 10 km from
the city center. The airport can be easily accessed by car,   Insurance
public bus service or taxi.                                   The Symposium Organizers do not accept any liability
                                                              for personal injuries or for loss or damage to property
Public transport in Warsaw                                    belonging to conference participants, either during or
www.ztm.waw.pl                                                as a result of the conference. It is recommended that you
                                                              purchase an appropriate insurance policy in your coun-
Tourist information                                           try of origin.
www.warsawtour.pl/en
                                                              Shopping
Currency                                                      Shopping hours are Monday to Friday 8:00–19:00 and
The currency in Poland is the Polish Zloty, PLN (of-          Saturday 9:00–14:00.
ten written zl). Present exchange rates can be found at       Shopping malls and most supermarkets are open also
www.nbp.pl                                                    on Sunday 10:00–21:00.

Credit cards                                                  Useful Telephone Numbers
Commonly accepted credit cards are Visa, Master Card          Emergency – 112
and Diners. American Express is less popular. Restau-         Dialing code for Poland +48

Social Program
Sunday, 21 May 2017                                           Networking evening meeting            18:30, Kajetany
Welcome reception                           19:00 – 21:00     Transportation: Organizers will provide bus transpor-
Marriott Hotel, Grand Ballroom                                tation from Marriott hotel to Kajetany and return. Bus
                                                              schedule will be available at Symposium Registration
Monday, 22 May 2017                                           desk and Symposium Office.
Opening Ceremony                               8:30–9:00
Marriott Hotel, Grand Ballroom DEF                            Wednesday, 24 May 2017
                                                              Networking Dinner                     18:30, Kajetany
Dinner                                 18:30 – 20:30          Transportation: Organizers will provide bus transpor-
Pałac Kultury i Nauki, Ratuszowa Hall (www.pkin.pl)           tation from Marriott hotel to Kajetany and return. Bus
How to get there: 10 minutes of walk from Marriott            schedule will be available at Symposium Registration
hotel                                                         desk and Symposium Office.

Tuesday, 23 May 2017                                          Thursday, 25 May 2017
Excursion to Museum of Warsaw Uprising and Ła-                Closing Ceremony                           12:30–13:00
zienki Park (depending on weather)       13:00                Marriott Hotel, Grand Ballroom

                                                                                                   Final Program • 19
XXXV
World Congress of
AUDIOLOGY
2020, Warsaw, Poland
Scientific Program
Timetable

            May 21 (SUN)              May 22 (MON)           May 23 (TUE)         May 24 (WED)           May 25 (THU)

                                                                                         G2
 8:00
                                                                                     Guest Lecture               K3
                                                                                                           Keynote Lecture
 8:30                                  Opening Ceremony
                                                                    S1                    S2
                                                              Special session       Special session              O10
 9:00                                         K1
                                                                                                       Protocols and procedures
                                        Hallowell Davis
                                                                                                          in evoked potential
 9:30                                       Lecture
                                                                    K2                   O6                 measurements
                                                              Keynote Lecture           ASSR I
 10:00                                                                                                       Coffee Break
                                              O1
                                             ABR I
 10:30   Workshop I    Workshop III                             Coffee Break         Coffee Break

 11:00                                    Coffee Break                                                           O11
                                                                                          O7
                                                                                                         Cognitive and event-
                                                                   O5                  ASSR II
 11:30                                                                                                    related potentials
                                                                WBA & OAE
                                                                                         G3
 12:00
                                              O2                                     Guest Lecture
                                             ABR II
 12:30
            Lunch (on your own)                                    Lunch                Lunch             Closing Ceremony
 13:00

 13:30
                                             Lunch
 14:00                                                                                    O8
                                                                                    Middle and long
 14:30                                                                             latency responses
                                              O3
                                            ABR III
 15:00   Workshop II   Workshop IV

 15:30                                    Coffee Break                               Coffee Break
                                                                 Excursion
                                             G1
 16:00                                                                                    O9
                                         Guest Lecture
                                              O4                                   Evoked potentials
 16:30                                                                                  in CI
                                      Electrocochleography

 17:00
                                              P1                                          P2
                                        Poster Session I                           Poster Session II
 17:30

 18:00

 18:30
                                                             Networking Evening
                                            Dinner                                Networking Dinner
                                                                  Dinner
 19:00       Welcome Reception

                                                                                                       Final Program • 21
Announcing the world’s best
electrophysiological and vestibular
         assessment technologies
   From ONE source, on ONE platform,
                    for the first time

              Stimulus Family
      “Our
      “Our work
             workhas
                   hasshown
                         shownthat thatnarrow-
                                          narrow-
      band
      band CE-Chirps
             CE-Chirps®offer
                        ®
                            offerfrequency-
                                   frequency-
      specific
      specific testing
                testinginintypically
                              typicallyhalf
                                          halfthe
      time  takentaken
      the time      by tone    pips. Given
                          by tone             that a
                                      pips. Given
      sleeping  baby is baby
      that a sleeping      a ticking
                                  is atime   bomb
                                        ticking
      waiting
      time bombto go   off, that’s
                     waiting        an off,
                                to go   advantage
                                             that’s
      you  can’t affordyou
      an advantage        to pass
                               can’tup.  It’s to
                                       afford
      frustrating
      pass up. It’sthat  not all ABR
                      frustrating       systems
                                     that   not all
      offer this stimulus.*”
      ABR systems      offer this stimulus.*”                                                            Micromedical
             Dr
             Dr Guy
                Guy Lightfoot
                    Lightfoot                                                                            by Interacoustics

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ABR/OAE                          Balance Assessment               Fitting Systems           Middle Ear Analyzers         Audiometers

 Interacoustics is a world leading diagnostic solutions provider in the fields of hearing and balance assessment. We help the professional
 audiologic world reach new milestones through continuous developments and a constant focus on integration and direct customer value.
                                 Oticon Polska         Tel: 22 164 65 00   diagnostyka@oticon.com   interacoustics.com
Sunday, May 21
Congress Room                                                                    GRAND BALLROOM ABC

Workshop I                                                                                                    9:00–12:30
Clinical Application of Auditory Evoked Responses in Children:
Evidence-Based Procedures and Protocols
James W. Hall

Lunch (on your own)                                                                                           12:30–13:30

Workshop II                                                                                                  13:30–16:30
Wideband Acoustic Immittance
John J. Rosowski, M. Patrick Feeney

Congress Room                                                                    GRAND BALLROOM DEF

Workshop III                                                                                                  9:00–12:30
Analysis and applications of speech evoked responses
Steven L. Bell

Lunch (on your own)                                                                                           12:30–13:30

Workshop IV                                                                                                  13:30–16:30
Advanced EEG analysis
Andrew Dimitrijevic

Welcome Reception                                                                                                  19:00

                                        Monday, May 22
Congress Room                                                                    GRAND BALLROOM DEF

Opening Ceremony                                                                                               8:30–9:00
Henryk Skarzynski, Suzanne C. Purdy

Hallowell Davis Lecture – John D. Durrant                                                                     9:00–10:00
Unpublished Works and the Importance of Continuing to Turn Stones in Our Science
Moderator:                                                                                               Suzanne C. Purdy

ABR I                                                                                                        10:00–11:00
Moderators:                                                                                 Guy Lightfoot, Martin Walger

10:00–10:15      The threshold ABR high-pass filter re-visited: an old chestnut served up in a new way
                 Guy Lightfoot

                                                                                                         Final Program • 23
10:15–10:30    Comprehensive recording of auditory evoked potentials by projecting over a base of functions
                Joaquin Tomas Valderrama Valenzuela, Angel de la Torre, Bram Van Dun, Jaime Undurraga, Jose Carlos Segura, Harvey
                Dillon, David McAlpine

 10:30–10:45    A group sequential test strategy for objective auditory brainstem response detection methods
                Michael A. Chesnaye, Steven L. Bell, James M Harte, David M. Simpson

 10:45–11:00    Comparative study of noise in auditory brainstem evoked potentials recorded asleep and in active state
                Oleg Belov, Alla Yasinskaya, George Tavartkiladze

 Coffee Break                                                                                                          11:00–11:30

 ABR II                                                                                                               11:30–13:30
 Moderators:                                                                            Monica Chapchap, Krzysztof Kochanek

 11:30–11:45    Maturation of ABR in young children with congenital monaural atresia
                Martin Walger, Astrid Foerst, Dirk Fuerstenberg, Ruth Lang-Roth and Konrad Stuermer

 11:45–12:00    Cardiac activity appears to be the cause of a sloping ABR waveform
                Guy Lightfoot

 12:00–12:15    Auditory electrophysiological assessment in neonates with zika virus congenital syndrome.
                Daniela Capra, Milaine Sanfins, Fernanda Fialho, Paulo Niemeyer Filho

 12:15–12:30    Side effects of stimulus polarities with Level-Specific CE-chirps in clinical ABRs
                Marjolein Klaassen, Andy J. Beynon

 12:30–12:45    Methodological Approaches to Recording Speech Auditory Brainstem Responses: Effect of Stimulus Duration,
                Background, Consonant, and Number of Repetitions
                Ghada BinKhamis, Agnès Léger, Steven Bell, Martin O’Driscoll, Karolina Kluk

 12:45–13:00    Forward Masking of the Speech-Evoked Auditory Brainstem Response
                John H. Grose, Sarah Hodge

 13:00–13:15    Click and Speech-ABR assessment in children with history of otitis media unilateral and bilateral
                Milaine Dominici Sanfins, Leticia Reis Borges, Caroline Donadon, Piotr H. Skarzynski,
                Maria Francisca Colella-Santos

 13:15–13:30    The potential role of the cABR in assessment of normal hearing adults with inherited neuropathies
                Il Joon Moon, Ji Eun Choi, Yoon Sang Ji, Kyung Myun Lee, Byung-Ok Choi, Sung Hwa Hong

 Lunch                                                                                                                 13:30–14:30

 ABR III                                                                                                              14:30–15:30
 Moderators:                                                                                            Lee-Suk Kim, Lech Sliwa

 14:30 14:45    Auditory brainstem responses (ABR) in dolphins obtained with maximum length sequence (MLS)
                and randomized stimulation and averaging (RSA) techniques
                Robert Burkard, James Finneran, Jason Mulsow

 14:45–15:00    Derived narrow-band auditory brainstem responses to the biosonar click of the bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops
                truncatus)
                Jason Mulsow, James J. Finneran, Dorian S. Houser, Carolyn E. Schlundt

 15:00–15:15    Profile of auditory function in audiometrically normal humans with a history of loud music exposure
                John H. Grose

24 • IERASG 2017
15:15–15:30      Delayed D-methionine Administration Post-Noise Cessation, Significantly Rescues Permanent Auditory
                 Brainstem Response Threshold Shift in Chinchillas
                 Kathleen C.M. Campbell, Robert Meech, Steve Verhulst, Daniel Fox

Coffee Break                                                                                                     15:30–16:00

Guest Lecture I – John A. Ferraro                                                                                 16:00–16:30
Electrocochleography in the Diagnosis and Possible Prediction of Meniere’s Disease/
Endolymphatic Hydrops
Moderator:                                                                                                     John D. Durrant

Electrocochleography                                                                                              16:30–17:00
Moderators:                                                                                    John A. Ferraro, John D. Durrant

16:30–16:45      Long term monitoring of the inner ear function during and after Cochlear Implant insertion using Cochlear
                 Microphonics
                 S. Haumann, M. Imsiecke, R. Salcher, A. Büchner, H. Maier, T. Lenarz

16:45–17:00      TT-ECochG recorded at high stimulus rate in patients with Meniere disease
                 Krzysztof Morawski, Katarzyna Pierchala, Rafael Delgado, Kazimierz Niemczyk

Congress Room                                                                            GRAND BALLROOM ABC

Poster Session I                                                                                                  17:00–18:00

PP-01   Methylprednisolone use during radiotherapy extenuates hearing loss in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma
        Junming Chen, Yuanxin Zhao, Xiaowei Zhou, Lingmei Tan, Zeying Ou, Youjun Yu, Yuejian Wang

PP-02   ABR wave I presence as an alternative to masking: do Narrow-Band CE-Chirps® offer an advantage over tone pips?
        Inga Ferm, Guy Lightfoot

PP-03   Comparison of Auditory Brainstem Evoked Responses Results According to the Presence of Diabetes Mellitus in
        Patients with Tinnitus
        Sang Hun Lee, Joong Ho Ahn

PP-04   Auditory brainstem responses as an evaluation method for hidden hearing loss in noise-exposed ears with normal
        audiograms
        Kyung Jin Roh, Ju Young Kim, Min Seok Kim, Ji Hyung Kim, Seong Ah Hong, Seon Geum Kim, Eun Jin Son

PP-05   Bone Conduction Auditory Brainstem Response Measurements with the New Audiometric Bone Conduction Transducer
        Radioear B81.
        Sumru Keceli, Stefan Stenfelt

PP-06   Development of novel criteria models for the prediction of acoustic tumor using click and Chirp-evoked ABR
        Yoonjae Song, Mun Young Chang,Min Young Lee, Eun Young Lee, Sun O. Chang, Jun Ho Lee

PP-07   Comparison of Latency and Amplitude of Intraoperative EABR Measurements Between Infants and the Elderly
        Chieko Enomoto , Kimitaka Kaga , Shujiro Minami , Yusuke Kimura

PP-08   The effect of aging and the high-frequency auditory threshold on speech-evoked mismatch negativity in a noisy
        background
        Junming Chen, Suijun Chen, Yiqing Zheng, Yongkang Ou

                                                                                                              Final Program • 25
Wideband
   Tympanometry                                                                            Benefits in
                                                                                           paediatric testing
                                                                                           1. Multiple tympanograms

   outperforms traditional                                                                     Save time with fewer
                                                                                               measurements.

impedance measurements!
                                                                                               226-1000 Hz in a single sweep

                                                                                           2. Improved sensitivity
                                                                                               Improved accuracy over standard
                                                                                               tympanometry

                                                                                           3. Stable and robust recordings
                                                     WBT with                                  Clear results with noisy children
                                                     multiple tymps                        4. Know your type C
                                                     including 226 Hz and                     tympanogram
                                                     1 kHz in one sweep                        Know when OME is present in the
                                                     is an unmatched                           middle ear

                                                     tool in pediatric                     5. Seeing through pressure
                                                     assessment!                              equalization tubes
                                                                                               Examine the middle ear beyond
                                                                                               the PE tube

                                                                                           interacoustics.com

ABR/OAE                    Balance Assessment           Fitting Systems             Middle Ear Analyzers         Audiometers

 Interacoustics is a world leading diagnostic solutions provider in the fields of hearing and balance assessment. We help the professional
 audiologic world reach new milestones through continuous developments and a constant focus on integration and direct customer value.
                           Oticon Polska     Tel: 22 164 65 00   diagnostyka@oticon.com     interacoustics.com
PP-09   An overview on the relationship between the auditory late latency responses in adults with a cochlear implant
        and auditory performances
        Jacquemin Laure, Gilles Annick, Mertens Griet, Van de Heyning Paul

PP-10   Cortical Auditory Evoked Responses of Vocal Emotion in Elderly
        Wondo Na, Woojae Han

PP-11   Cortical Responses elicited by /u/, /a/, /i/ According to Angry, Happy, Sad Emotions
        Seungwan Lee, Jinsook Kim

PP-12   Continuous noise maskers reduce cochlear implant related artifacts during electrophysiological testing
        Ji-Hye Han, Andrew Dimitrijevic

PP-13   Auditory evoked potential (ABR and cognitive potential) in children with a history of otitis media
        Milaine Dominici Sanfins, Leticia Reis Borges, Caroline Donadon, Piotr H. Skarzynski, Maria Francisca Colella-Santos

PP-14   The use of the middle latency response as an indicator of anaesthetic depth: an investigation using a slow induction
        of propofol anaesthesia.
        Giulia Lioi, Steven L. Bell, David C. Smith and David M. Simpson

PP-15   Exploration of inter-individual variability in cortical responses to natural English sentences
        Frederique J. Vanheusden, Steven L. Bell, Michael A. Chesnaye, David M. Simpson

PP-16   Simultaneous Acquisition of 40 Hz and 80 Hz Auditory Steady-state Responses for a Direct Comparison of Response
        Amplitude, Residual Noise and Signal-to-noise Ratio
        Roland Mühler, Alexandra Petzke, Jesko L. Verhey

PP-17   Audiometric thresholds estimation using simultaneous acquisition of ASSR and ABR from QASSR in sensorineural
        hearing loss
        Magdalena Lachowska, Jorge Bohórquez, Özcan Özdamar, Kazimierz Niemczyk

PP-18   New Objective Way to Diagnose Cochlear Dead Regions using Auditory Steady-State Responses
        Emanuele Perugia, Frederic Marmel, Karolina Kluk

PP-19   Method for simultaneous air and bone conduction hearing screening
        Rafael E. Delgado, Linda J. Hood, Lauren Roberts

PP-20   Intracochlear Recordings of Acoustically and Electrically Evoked Potentials in Nucleus Hybrid L24 Cochlear Implant
        Users and Their Relationship to Speech Perception
        Jae-Ryong Kim, Carolyn J. Brown, Viral D. Tejani, Paul J. Abbas

PP-21   Distinct elongated EABR wave latencies observed in auditory neuropathy patients with OTOF mutations
        Makoto Hosoya, Shujiro B. Minami, Chieko Enomoto, Kimitaka Kaga

PP-22   Comparison of TT-ECochG and directly recorded cochlear nerve action potentials measured during vestibular
        Schwannoma resection
        Krzysztof Morawski, Izabela Pobozny, Kazimierz Niemczyk

PP-23   Intraoperative Ossiculoplasty Efficiency Assessment by RW-ECochG
        Robert Morawski, Kazimierz Niemczyk, Robert Bartoszewicz, Rafael Delgado, Krzysztof Morawski

PP-24   Poorer hearing in noise despite full recovery of thresholds in rats: Functional evidence of “hidden hearing loss”?
        Edward Lobarinas, Christopher Spankovich, Samantha Morrill, Colleen G. Le Prell

PP-25   Clinical Measurements for Investigating Hidden Hearing Loss
        Pernille Holtegaard, Josefine Juul Jensen, Sara Ater Baker Al-Ward, Bastian Epp

                                                                                                                       Final Program • 27
PP-26    Lifetime noise exposure affects human auditory brainstem responses
          Joaquin Tomas Valderrama Valenzuela, Elizabeth Beach, Ingrid Yeend, Jermy Pang, Mridula Sharma, Bram Van Dun, Harvey Dillon

 PP-27    Comparison of high-frequency distortion product otoacoustic emissions measured by two systems
          Edyta Pilka, W. Wiktor Jedrzejczak, Lukasz Olszewski, Krzysztof Kochanek, Henryk Skarzynski

 PP-28    Pressurized vs non pressurized Otoacoustic Emissions: A case report
          Milaine D. Sanfins, Thais A. D. Hein, Piotr H. Skarzynski, Stavros Hatzopoulos, Maria Francisca Colella-Santos

 PP-29    The effect of bone-conducted stimuli at different stimulation sites on contra- and ipsilateral ocular vestibular evoked
          myogenic potentials
          Machteld J. Boonstra, Richard J.A. van Wezel, Jasper B. van der Heijdt, Andy J. Beynon

 PP-30    Evaluation of air-conducted cervical and ocular vestibular evoked miogenic potentials in patients with Susac’s
          syndrome
          Magdalena Lachowska, Paulina Glinka, Monika Nojszewska, Beata Zakrzewska-Pniewska, Kazimierz Niemczyk

 PP-31    Splenius capitis can be a replaceable target for measuring cervical vestibular evoked myogenic potentials
          Shin Hye Kim, Sung-Won Chae

 PP-32    Cortical auditory evoked potential (CAEP) in patients with cochlear implantation
          Jong Woo Chung, Jee Yeon Lee, Byung Chul Kang, Jun Woo Park, Woo Seok Kang, Jung Ho Ahn, Hong Ju Park

 Dinner                                                                                                                    18:30–20:30

28 • IERASG 2017
Tuesday, May 23
Congress Room                                                                              GRAND BALLROOM DEF

Special session – Roger Thornton                                                                                   8:30–9:30
History of IERASG

Keynote Lecture I – John J. Rosowski                                                                              9:30–10:30
Wideband Acoustic Immittance and Sound Power Absorbance
as a measure of the Acoustic Reflex
Moderator:                                                                                                  M. Patrick Feeney

Coffee Break                                                                                                     10:30–11:00

Otoacoustic emissions & Wideband absorbance                                                                     11:00–12:30
Moderators:                                                                            George Tavartkiladze, Jacek Smurzynski

11:00–11:30    Cochlear Echoes: What we really assess with the OAE responses.
               (An excursus into the realm of clinical OAE applications)
               Stavros Hatzopoulos

11:30–11:45    Input/output characteristics of tone burst-evoked otoacoustic emissions
               W. Wiktor Jedrzejczak, Krzysztof Kochanek, Edyta Pilka, Henryk Skarzynski

11:45–12:00    Variability of Medial Olivo-cochlear Reflex acrros Click – and Distortion Product Evoked Otoacoustic Emissions
               Kayla Ichiba, Siena Schoelin, Alireza Pourjavid, Barbara Cone

12:00–12:15    Comparison of wideband tympanometry results from two devices
               Lech Sliwa, Krzysztof Kochanek, Henryk Skarzynski

12:15–12:30    Wideband tympanometry in otosclerotic ears.
               Elzbieta Niemczyk, Magdalena Lachowska, Kazimierz Niemczyk

Lunch                                                                                                            12:30–13:30

Excursion                                                                                                       13:30–18:30

Networking Evening Meeting                                                                                             18:30

                                                                                                            Final Program • 29
15
                                th
               Anniversary

       Medincus Group
                              2002-2017

                      2009
               2007             2008

                                       2006
                              2002
                             2007     2015
                      2010             2008
2015                           2015

       2011

                                              2016

         www.medincus.pl
Wednesday, May 24
Congress Room                                                                         GRAND BALLROOM DEF

Guest lecture III – Paul Kileny                                                                                       8:00–8:30
Tympanic Electrocochleography in SSCD: diagnostic,
and intraoperative monitoring applications
Moderator:                                                                                                      John D. Durrant

Special session – fMRI – David McPherson, Tomasz Wolak                                                                8:30–9:30

ASSR I                                                                                                              9:30–10:30
Moderators:                                                                                      Andrew Dimitrijevic, Jun-Ho Lee

9:30–9:45      Multi-Rate Spread Spectrum ASSR
               Andre Lodwig

9:45–10:00     Improved reliability of binaural multi-frequency ASSR measurements by combining ipsi- and contra-lateral
               EEG data for automatic response detection
               Cebulla Mario, Harte James, Stürzebecher Ekkehard

10:00–10:15    Measurement efficiency of multiple 30–50 Hz ASSRs
               Robin Gransier, Astrid van Wieringen, Jan Wouters

10:15–10:30    Multichannel frequency-domain Hotelling’s T2 test for detection of envelope following responses to natural
               vowels
               Frederique J. Vanheusden, Steven L. Bell, Michael A. Chesnaye, David M. Simpson

Coffee Break                                                                                                        10:30–11:00

ASSR II                                                                                                            11:00–12:00
Moderators:                                                                             David Purcell, W. Wiktor Jedrzejczak

11:00–11:15    Binaural loudness balancing using auditory steady-state responses
               Maaike Van Eeckhoutte, Jan Wouters, Tom Francart

11:15–11:30    Exploring the encoding of sound level in the speech-evoked frequency following response to four synthetic
               English vowels
               Brian Heffernan, Hilmi R. Dajani, Christian Giguère

11:30–11:45    EASSRs for characterizing across-channel variability in cochlear implants
               Jan Wouters, Robin Gransier, Robert Luke, Astrid van Wieringen

11:45–12:00    Auditory steady-state response (ASSR) modulation-rate transfer functions (MRTFs) of the bottlenose dolphin
               to SAM tones, tonebursts and clicks
               Dorian Houser, James Finneran, Jason Mulsow, Robert Burkard

Guest Lecture IV – Mridula Sharma                                                                                  12:00–12:30
Applications of auditory evoked potentials in understanding ABC:
auditory processing, bilingualism and cognition
Moderator:                                                                                                        Barbara Cone

Lunch                                                                                                               12:30–13:30

                                                                                                               Final Program • 31
Middle and long latency responses                                                                                     13:30–15:30
 Moderators:                                                                                  Suzanne C. Purdy, Frank E. Musiek

 13:30–13:45     Employing the acoustic change complex for vowel discrimination
                 Barbara Cone, Diane Cheek

 13:45–14:00     Using Cortical Evoked Potentials to Predict Speech Feature Perception in Infants
                 Barbara Cone, Spencer Smith, Diane Cheek

 14:00–14:15     Reduction of cochlear implant artefacts in single-channel cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs)
                 recorded to 400-ms narrow-band noise stimuli in the free field
                 Bram Van Dun, Nicky Chong-White, Robert Cowan

 14:15–14:30     Changes in Stimuli Spectral Complexity Modulates Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials Amplitude.
                 Bardy Fabrice, Lee Chelsea, Van Dun Bram, Dillon Harvey

 14:30–14:45     Evaluation of Deep Neural Networks for Cortical Auditory Evoked Potential (CAEP) Detection
                 Bardy Fabrice, Tobias Goehring

 14:45–15:00     Auditory Evoked Potentials Generated by Noise Gaps: Effects of Onset, Offset and Duration
                 O. Ozdamar, K. Alhussaini, J. Bohorquez , R.E. Delgado

 15:00–15:15     Speech-evoked cortical auditory evoked potentials in adults with mild cognitive impairment compared to
                 younger & age-matched controls
                 Suzanne C. Purdy, Oscar Canete, Joan Leung, Abin Kuruvilla-Mathew, Peter R. Thorne, Lynette Tippett

 15:15–15:30     Cortical detection of stimuli presented from different angles: the \”Spatial Change Complex\”
                 Andy J. Beynon, Suzan E. Noordeloos

 Coffee Break                                                                                                          15:30–16:00

 Auditory Evoked Potentials in Cochlear Implant Users                                                                  16:00–17:00
 Moderators                                                                                              Andy Beynon, Artur Lorens

 16:00–16:15     Recordings of acoustic evoked potentials directly from the cochlea via intracochlear electrodes in partially
                 deafened cochlear implantees
                 Adam Walkowiak, Artur Lorens, Marek Polak, Henryk Skarzynski

 16:15–16:30     Auditory neuroplasticitic change of cochlear implant recipients revealed in cortical auditory evoked potential
                 Sung Wook Jeong, Seung-Hyun Jung, Ah-Hyun Choi, Lee-Suk Kim

 16:30–16:45     Epidural Recordings of Auditory Evoked Potentials in Cochlear Implant Users
                 S. Haumann, G. Bauernfeind, M.J. Teschner, J. Rieger, T. Lenarz

 16:45–17:00     Cortical auditory evoked potential is modulated by attention and related to speech perception abilities
                 in cochlear Implant users
                 Ji-Hye Han, Andrew Dimitrijevic

 Congress Room                                                                            GRAND BALLROOM ABC

 Poster Session II                                                                                                     17:00–18:00

 PP-33   Advancing toward an objective EEG detection method for supra-threshold deficits
         Frederic Marmel, Emanuele Perugia, Karolina Kluk

32 • IERASG 2017
PP-34   Is a chirp a prihc?
        Salim Suleman, Steven L. Bell

PP-35   Effects of the Noise Reduction of Hearing Aids on cABR
        Yoon Sang Ji, Heesung Park, Hyun Jee Jung,Il Joon Moon, Yang-Sun Cho, Sung Hwa Hong

PP-36   Temporal masking at the brainstem level: a pilot study
        Renata Filippini, Spencer Smith, Frank Musiek

PP-37   Speech-evoked brainstem response in children and adolescent with education musical
        Milaine Dominici Sanfins, Stavros Hatzopoulos, Thais Antonelli Diniz Hein, Tatiana Bordin, Antonio Pastore, Claudia Aimoni,
        Piotr H. Skarzynski, Maria Francisca Colella-Santos

PP-38   Gene therapy by in-utero rescues hearing function in a mouse model of genetic hearing loss
        Kyu-Yup Lee, Min-A Kim, Nari Ryu, Chang Hyun Cho, Un-Kyung Kim

PP-39   The clinical utility of narrow-band chirp auditory brainstem responses: inter-rater reliability and threshold estimation
        Lindsey N. Van Yper, Andy J. Beynon, Katrien Kestens, Ingeborg J.M. Dhooge

PP-40   Subcortical plasticity in tinnitus subjects following exposure to short and intense notched music training
        Shaghayegh Omidvar, Zahra Jafari, Saeid Mahmoudian, Mehdi Khabazkhoob, Mohsen Ahadi

PP-41   Cortical auditory evoked potentials in noise under conditions of masking release
        Bastian Epp, Katharina Egger

PP-42   Mismatch response versus acoustic change complex: Assessment of auditory temporal fine structure processing –
        finding an objective paradigm.
        Surbhi Hablani, Saskia M. Waechter, Richard B. Reilly

PP-43   Comparison of auditory p300 in amphetamine users and non-users of other narcotics, psychotropics and other
        addictive substances
        Yus Ukhrowiyah, Semiramis Zizlavsky, Ronny Suwento, Saptawati Bardosono, Nurmiati

PP-44   Preliminary results on the P300 auditory event-related potential as a method to assess the benefit of wearing
        a contralateral hearing aid in bimodal listeners
        Lindsey N. Van Yper, Ingeborg JM Dhooge, Katrien Vermeire, Eddy FJ De Vel, Andy J. Beynon

PP-45   Effect of polarity of 500 Hz tone pip on wave V threshold
        Krzysztof Kochanek, Ksenia Korzeniec, Adam Pilka, Lech Sliwa, Henryk Skarzynski

PP-46   Objective evaluation of visual and cognitive functions in children with central auditory processing disorders (CAPD) –
        an event-related potentials (ERPs) study using the Visual Continuous Performance Test.
        Rafal Milner, Monika Lewandowska, Malgorzata Ganc, Kochanski Bartosz, Paluch Paulina

PP-47   Comparing cortical evoked auditory potientials using HEARLab with stimulus sensation levels in children
        with hearing aids.
        E. Galaup, B. Sköld, U. Olsson, I. Uhlén

PP-48   Characteristics of auditory brainstem evoked potentials in subjects with Down syndrome
        Katarzyna Sienkiewicz, Adam Pilka, Lech Sliwa, Krzysztof Kochanek

PP-49   Correlation between the behavioral hearing thresholds (BHT) and electrophysiological (auditory steady-state
        responses - ASSR) in young adults.
        Daniela Capra, Alessandra Rabelo O. Lamenza, Jair de Carvalho e Castro, Milaine Dominici Sanfins

                                                                                                                 Final Program • 33
PP-50   It’s all about context: Investigating the effects of consonant and vowel environment on vowel-evoked envelope
         following responses
         Emma Bridgwater, David W. Purcell

 PP-51   Frequency-specific phase shift varies detectability of vowel-evoked envelope following responses
         Viji Easwar, Ashlee Banyard, Steve Aiken, David Purcell

 PP-52   Stimulus bandwidth impact to AEP thresholds and estimated upper-frequency limits of hearing in toothed whales
         Dorian Houser, Jason Mulsow, James Finneran, Robert Burkard

 PP-53   Preliminary results and challenges of artefact reduction in analysis of mismatch responses elicited by amplitude
         modulation detection in cochlear implant users
         Saskia M. Waechter, Alejandro Lopez Valdes, Cristina Simoes-Franklin, Jackie Smyth, Laura Viani, Richard B. Reilly

 PP-54   Low-Frequency Electrocochleography in a Guinea Pig Model of Cochlear Implantation with Residual Hearing
         Youssef Adel, Jochen Tillein, Timo Stöver, Uwe Baumann

 PP-55   Analysis of intraoperative changes of the cochlear nerve action potential during vestibular schwannoma resection
         Izabela Pobozny, Krzysztof Morawski, Rafael Delgado, Katarzyna Pierchala, Kazimierz Niemczyk

 PP-57   Analysis of Audio-vestibular Assessment in Acute Low-tone Hearing Loss
         Gi Jung Im, Sung Kyun Kim, June Choi, Seung Hwan Lee, Sung Won Chae, Hak Hyun Jung

 PP-58   Correlation of hearing impairment with the conditions of the tympanic membrane perforation and mastoid air
         cell volume
         Hoseo K. Lee, Jae-Hyun Seo

 PP-59   Changes of hearing function in preterm born children with age
         I.V. Savenko, E.S. Garbaruk

 PP-60   Verification of finite element model for the human ossicular vibration performance using 3D printed biomimetic
         ceramic ossicle
         Jeong-Hoon Oh, Jung-Seob Lee, Sung Won Kim, Dong-Woo Cho

 PP-61   Electrical stimulation to a vestibule can induce auditory sensation without vestibular symptom in a child with cochlear
         aplasia
         Sung Wook Jeong, Lee-Suk Kim

 PP-62   Wideband absorbance measures for assessment of otosclerotic ears: A preliminary study.
         Krzysztof Kochanek, Lech Sliwa, Henryk Skarzynski

 PP-63   Assessment of wideband absorbance in patients with middle-ear implants: A preliminary study
         Henryk Skarzynski, Lukasz Olszewski, Krzysztof Kochanek, Lech Sliwa

 Networking Dinner                                                                                                            18:30

34 • IERASG 2017
Thursday, May 25
Congress Room                                                                             GRAND BALLROOM DEF

Keynote Lecture II – Frank E. Musiek                                                                                          8:00–9:00
The Middle Latency Response (MLR) and Disorders of the Central Nervous System
Moderator:                                                                                                           David McPherson

Protocols and procedures in evoked potential measurements                                                                    9:00–10:00
Moderators:                                                                                     Robert Burkard, James W. Hall III

9:00–9:15      Frequency-specificity using belly-tendon montage to obtain Ocular Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials
               Jasper B. van der Heijdt, Richard J.A. van Wezel, Andy J. Beynon

9:15–9:30      A fully automatic method for removal of artifacts from EEG
               Ben Somers, Jonas Vanthornhout, Tom Francart

9:30–9:45      Effects of recreational noise on evoked potential amplitude and other auditory test metrics
               Colleen G. Le Prell, Sarah K. Grinn, Jason Baker, Kathryn Wiseman

9:45–10:00     Synaptopathy with envelope frequency responses (EFR): The off-frequency problem
               Gerard Encina-Llamas, Aravind Parthasarathy, James M. Harte, Torsten Dau, Sharon Kujawa,
               Barbara Shinn-Cunningham, Bastian Epp

Coffee Break                                                                                                                10:00–10:30

Cognitive and event-related potentials                                                                                     10:30–12:30
Moderators:                                                                                        Robert Cowan, Mridula Sharma

10:30–10:45    The effect of noise on N400
               Shivali Appaiah Konganda, Mridula Sharma, Joaquin Tomas Valderrama Valenzuela, Elizabeth Beach, Jessica Monaghan,
               John Newall, Gitte Keidsar, Elaine Schmidt

10:45–11:00    EEG alpha rhythms as a biomarker for Listening Effort for speech in noise perception
               in cochlear implant users.
               Andrew Dimitrijevic

11:00–11:15    The relationship between 3-Month-Old Speech Contrast MMN and Performance on Behavioral Measure
               of Speech Discrimination at 7 Months of Age
               Kristin Uhler and Phillip Gilley

11:15–11:30    Behavioral and online statistical learning in children with musical training
               Pragati Rao Mandikal Vasuki, Mridula Sharma, Ronny Ibrahim, Joanne Arciuli

11:30–11:45    Effect of spectral resolution on neural entrainment of the speech envelope
               Jonas Vanthornhout, Lien Decruy, Tom Francart

11:45–12:00    Evaluating auditory discrimination in infants using visual reinforcement infant speech discrimination (VRISD)
               and the acoustic change complex (ACC)
               Robert Cowan, Teresa Ching, Bram Van Dun, Vicky Zhang, Cara Wong, Fabrice Bardy, Mridula Sharma, Gary Rance,
               Donella Chisari, Julien Zanin, Trish Van Buynder, Lauren Burns, Laura Button, Nan Xu, Katherine Demuth, Harvey Dillon

                                                                                                                     Final Program • 35
12:00–12:15   Electrophysiological and behavioral measures of some speech contrasts in attention
               and noise conditions
               David Jackson Morris; John Tøndering

 12:15–12:30   A new objective test of speech perception in noise: Brain oscillations while watching/listening
               naturalistic stimuli.
               Andrew Dimitrijevic

 Closing Ceremony                                                                                                12:30–13:30
 Henryk Skarzynski, Suzanne C. Purdy

 Robert Burkard – Summary
 Presentation of next meetings

 Notes

36 • IERASG 2017
Final Program • 37
38 • IERASG 2017
w w w. j o u r n a l o f h e a r i n g s c i e n c e . c o m

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