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Hearing Health Institute Goals

Our ultimate goal is improving hearing, mental, and cognitive health for patients in Illinois and across the globe. We will develop AI and Big Data tools to address three main areas:

  • Prediction of clinical outcomes to motivate early intervention
  • Biomarker development to accelerate development of new and effective treatments, and
  • Developing patient-centered treatment strategies to restore healthy hearing especially targeting underserved communities

Hearing Health Institute Team

Fatima Husain

Fatima T. Husain

husainf@illinois.edu


University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: Professor, Speech and Hearing Science

Amber Leaver

Amber Leaver

amber.leaver@northwestern.edu


Northwestern University: Research Assistant Professor, Radiology

Brad Sutton

Brad Sutton

bsutton@illinois.edu


University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: Professor, Bioengineering; Technical Director, Biomedical Imaging Center

Hoa Luong

Hoa Luong

hluong2@illinois.edu


University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: Associate Director, Research Data Service

Yuliy Baryshnikov

Yuliy Baryshnikov

ymb@illinois.edu


University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering and Mathematics

Jonathan Peelle

Jonathan Peelle

jpeelle@wustl.edu


Washington University: Associate Professor, Otolaryngology

New Technologies in Veteran Hearing Loss and Tinnitus

PI Fatima Husain, head of the Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, speaks to the Chez Veterans Center about her group’s work using neuroimaging (fMRI) and computational modeling techniques in the study of disorders such as tinnitus (ringing in the ear) typically associated with hearing loss.

Hearing Health Institute in the News

Emotion processing in brain changes with tinnitus severity

Science Daily

Tinnitus, otherwise known as ringing in the ears, affects nearly one-third of adults over age 65. The condition can develop as part of age-related hearing loss or from a traumatic injury. In either case, the resulting persistent noise causes varying amounts of disruption to everyday life.

While some tinnitus patients adapt to the condition, many others are forced to limit daily activities as a direct result of their symptoms. A new study reveals that people who are less bothered by their tinnitus use different brain regions when processing emotional information…