Part II. Preclinical and Clinical Models of Tinnitus
Pharmacological modelling of tinnitus in animals
Animal models of sensory and brain stimulation effects on tinnitus
Cochlear damage and the mechanisms of tinnitus - implications for treatments
Part III. Developing Biomarkers for Tinnitus
Functional neuroanatomy of tinnitus
Neuroinflammation and tinnitus
Using big data to guide therapy development
Part IV. Pharmacotherapy and Neuromodulation of Tinnitus
Pharmacoltherapy for tinnitus
Sound therapy devices and mechanisms
Cochlear electrical stimulation
Brain stimulation
Biomodal stimulation
Part V. Cognitive and Affective Aspects of Tinnitus
Effect of tinnitus on attention and cognition
Neurobiology of stress induced tinnitus
Behavioral correlates of tinnitus
Psychological aprroaches to tinnitus management
Part VI. Clinical Assessment of Tinnitus
Momentary evaluation
Questionnaires
Psychoacoustic evaluation of tinnitus
The origins of tinnitus and the development of effective treatments to treat tinnitus have puzzled scientists and clinicians for centuries. Now ground breaking research is beginning to unlock its secrets.
The Behavioral Neuroscience of Tinnitus provides critical and comprehensive discussions of the most recent developments in behavioral neuroscience research of tinnitus. Each chapter represents the most important contemporary account of the subject, with an emphasis on preclinical and clinical trials for the development of new diagnostics and therapeutics. New and emerging innovative approaches are covered whenever possible. Six topics are discussed in detail in this volume, which provide new insights in the etiology and mechanisms of tinnitus, new biomarkers towards objective and reliable diagnosis of tinnitus, pharmacological approaches towards curing tinnitus, bioengineering advances towards developing effective medical devices, as well as the latest in psychotherapy methods. The reviews in the volume expose researchers and clinicians, both new and experienced, to exciting advancements and state-of-the-art developments from preeminent researchers in the field of tinnitus.