USC Researcher Wins NIH Grant to Study How the Cochlea Processes Complex Sounds
The five-year project will pair animal measurements with noninvasive testing to find earlier markers of hearing loss and guide hearing-device design.
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USC researcher wins NIH grant to study how the cochlea processes complex sounds
USC researcher Karolina Charaziak, PhD, has been awarded a $3.3 million National Institutes of Health (NIH) Research Project (R01) grant to study how the cochlea, the part of the inner ear responsible for hearing, processes complex sounds encountered in everyday life.
USC researcher Karolina Charaziak awarded $3.3 million NIH grant to study the inner ear
USC researcher Karolina Charaziak, PhD, has been awarded a $3.3 million National Institutes of Health (NIH) Research Project (R01) grant to study how the cochlea, the part of the inner ear responsible for hearing, processes complex sounds encountered in everyday life. The five-year grant will allow Charaziak and her collaborators to combine advanced cochlear imaging, electrical recordings and computational modeling to study how the cochlea processes complex sounds in heathy hearing and hearing loss. The grant is funded by the NIH’s National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD).
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