IEEE Open Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology (Jan 2024)

Reverse Correlation Characterizes More Complete Tinnitus Spectra in Patients

  • Nelson V. Barnett,
  • Alec Hoyland,
  • Divya A. Chari,
  • Benjamin Parrell,
  • Adam C. Lammert

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/OJEMB.2024.3427318
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 589 – 592

Abstract

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Goal: We validate a recent reverse correlation approach to tinnitus characterization by applying it to individuals with clinically-diagnosed tinnitus. Methods: Two tinnitus patients assessed the subjective similarity of their non-tonal tinnitus percepts and random auditory stimuli. Regression of the responses onto the stimuli yielded reconstructions which were evaluated qualitatively by playing back resynthesized waveforms to the subjects and quantitatively by response prediction analysis. Results: Subject 1 preferred their resynthesis to white noise; subject 2 did not. Response prediction balanced accuracies were significantly higher than chance across subjects: subject 1: 0.5963, subject 2: 0.6922. Conclusion: Reverse correlation can provide the foundation for reconstructing accurate representations of complex, non-tonal tinnitus in clinically diagnosed subjects. Further refinements may yield highly similar waveforms to individualized tinnitus percepts.

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