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This volume provides a detailed update on progress in the field of
hair cell regeneration. This topic is of considerable interest to
academicians, clinicians, and commercial entities, including
students of auditory and vestibular neuroscience, audiologists,
otologists, and industry, all of whom may have interest in hair
cell regeneration as a potential future therapy for hearing and
balance dysfunction. In 2008, Springer published a SHAR
volume on this subject (Hair Cell Regeneration, Repair, and
Protection, Editors Richard Salvi and Richard Fay). Since
that time, there has been considerable advancement in this
field.This book provides a historical perspective on the field, but
the emphasis is on more "prospective" views of the various facets
of regeneration research, in the hope that the volume will
stimulate new projects and approaches, focusing on the limitations
of current knowledge and describing promising strategies for future
work. The book will include the following key features of hair cell
regeneration: • Cellular and molecular control hair cell
regeneration in non-mammalian species (in particular zebrafish and
chickens) • Our current understanding of the capacity for hair
cell replacement in mammals (rodents and humans).  •
Signals controlling pro-regenerative behaviors in supporting cells,
the hair cell progenitors. • New techniques that have been
applied to study the genetic and epigenetic regulation of hair cell
regeneration in mammals and non-mammals. • Contributions
of stem cells toward building new tools to explore how hair cell
regeneration is controlled and toward developing cells and tissue
for therapeutic transplantation. • Studies that have
applied gene and drug therapy to promote regeneration in mammals.
This volume focuses on the history of research on hearing from
comparative approaches. Â Each chapters examines the most
formative studies that led to current understanding of hearing
across taxa and still influence hearing research in general.Â
Much of the early work on hearing, which goes back to Aristotle, as
well as the classic work of 16th to early 20th century
scientists (e.g., Spellanzani, Retzius, RamĂłn y Cajal, and
Helmholtz) is not well known to modern investigators.Â
Similarly, work in the first 75 years of the 20th century is
also unknown or, in some cases, dismissed because it is “old.”
 Much of the earlier work describes research approaches and
results fundamental to our understanding of hearing as well as the
beauty of observation and synthesis. The pioneering work on hearing
contains ideas and questions that are still germane today. Thus,
the goal of this volume is to introduce, review, and put into
perspective, older but exemplary, extraordinary studies by
investigators that form the basis of our knowledge as well as
questions being asked today. Each chapter includes the first
significant observations and approaches to hearing in the taxa
and/or hearing type that is the focus of the chapter with some of
the most important earlier papers discussed in some detail,
including the theories, formative experiments, results, and
conclusions. Each chapter provides briefer notations and
citations of additional important papers that are outgrowths of the
founding research – or correlate and even reverse the original
works. Â This volume is a departure from the classic approach
established for the SHAR books in which the focus has been on a
single topic, and on the most recent and exciting
discoveries. One difference in this volume from past SHAR
volumes is that we have a more  coordinated approach for the
chapters to ensure that this volume is, indeed, a documentation of
hearing research history, not a review of the latest status of the
topic. A second difference is that the focus of the volume
is on the historical value of studies. In that sense, the
volume maintains the tutorial value for which SHAR books are
famous, but it explores the ancestry of modern research in order to
help new researchers to gain perspective on important questions and
on fundamental information they may not fully appreciate – to
their loss. Our interest in doing this volume comes from
phenomena familiar to most senior investigators - that younger
investigators often have little or no sense of the history of their
discipline, and they often do not know that their “hot” new
idea was not only pursued, and often solved, but further that it
was solved in an elegant way. We believe it is important to
bring the methodologies and discoveries on hearing done before the
advent of the internet to light, for the benefit and growth of new
research. In deciding on the chapter divisions for this book, we
considered a number of different organizational schemes, and
particularly using as a focus methodological approaches (e.g.,
psychoacoustics, low to high frequency types, physiology, anatomy).
However, we came to the conclusion that most investigators tend to
be more focused on working within a particular taxonomic group,
settling on particular taxa, in many cases driven by the special
hearing abilities. We also concluded that that this approach
is more naturally related to the evolution not only of
hearing, but also to the evolution of ideas, as much of hearing
science was part of the “natural philosopher” approach that was
a core element of historical discoveries.
Auditory behavior, perception, and cognition are all shaped by
information from other sensory systems. This volume examines this
multi-sensory view of auditory function at levels of analysis
ranging from the single neuron to neuroimaging in human clinical
populations. Visual Influence on Auditory Perception Adrian K.C.
Lee and Mark T. Wallace Cue Combination within a Bayesian Framework
David Alais and David Burr Toward a Model of Auditory-Visual Speech
Intelligibility Ken W. Grant and Joshua G. W. Bernstein An
Object-based Interpretation of Audiovisual Processing Adrian K.C.
Lee, Ross K. Maddox, and Jennifer K. Bizley Hearing in a "Moving"
Visual World: Coordinate Transformations Along the Auditory Pathway
Shawn M. Willett, Jennifer M. Groh, Ross K. Maddox Multisensory
Processing in the Auditory Cortex Andrew J. King, Amy
Hammond-Kenny, Fernando R. Nodal Audiovisual Integration in the
Primate Prefrontal Cortex Bethany Plakke and Lizabeth M. Romanski
Using Multisensory Integration to Understand Human Auditory Cortex
Michael S. Beauchamp Combining Voice and Face Content in the
Primate Temporal Lobe Catherine Perrodin and Christopher I. Petkov
Neural Network Dynamics and Audiovisual Integration Julian Keil and
Daniel Senkowski Cross-Modal Learning in the Auditory System
Patrick Bruns and Brigitte Roeder Multisensory Processing
Differences in Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder Sarah H.
Baum Miller, Mark T. Wallace Adrian K.C. Lee is Associate Professor
in the Department of Speech & Hearing Sciences and the
Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences at the University of
Washington, Seattle Mark T. Wallace is the Louise B McGavock
Endowed Chair and Professor in the Departments of Hearing and
Speech Sciences, Psychiatry, Psychology and Director of the
Vanderbilt Brain Institute at Vanderbilt University, Nashville
Allison B. Coffin is Associate Professor in the Department of
Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience at Washington State
University, Vancouver, WA Arthur N. Popper is Professor Emeritus
and research professor in the Department of Biology at the
University of Maryland, College Park Richard R. Fay is
Distinguished Research Professor of Psychology at Loyola
University, Chicago
This volume presents a set of essays that discuss the development
and plasticity of the vertebrate auditory system. The topic is one
that has been considered before in the Springer Handbook of
Auditory Research (volume 9 in 1998, and volume 23 in 2004) but the
field has grown substantially and it is appropriate to bring
previous material up to date to reflect the wealth of new data and
to raise some entirely new topics. At the same time, this volume is
also unique in that it is the outgrowth of a symposium honoring
two-time SHAR co-editor Professor Edwin W Rubel on his retirement.
The focus of this volume, though, is an integrated set of papers
that reflect the immense contributions that Dr. Rubel has made to
the field over his career. Thus, the volume concurrently presents a
topic that is timely for SHAR, but which also honors the pioneer in
the field. Each chapter explores development with consideration of
plasticity and how it becomes limited over time. The editors have
selected authors with professional, and often personal, connections
to Dr. Rubel, though all are, in their own rights, outstanding
scholars and leaders in their fields. The specific audience will be
graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and established
psychologists and neuroscientists who are interested in auditory
function, development, and plasticity. This volume will also be of
interest to hearing scientists and to the broad neuroscience
community because many of the ideas and principles associate with
the auditory system are applicable to most sensory systems. The
volume is organized to appeal to psychophysicists,
neurophysiologists, anatomists, and systems neuroscientists who
attend meetings such as those held by the Association for Research
in Otolaryngology, the Acoustical Society of America, and the
Society for Neuroscience.
This volume reviews contemporary developments in the auditory
cognitive neuroscience of speech perception, including both
behavioral and neural contributions. It serves as an important
update on the current state of research in speech perception. The
Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience of Speech Perception in Context
Lori L. Holt, and Jonathan E. Peelle Subcortical Processing of
Speech Sounds Bharath Chandrasekaran, Rachel Tessmer, and G. Nike
Gnanateja Cortical Representation of Speech Sounds: Insights from
Intracranial Electrophysiology Yulia Oganian, Neal P. Fox, and
Edward F. Chang A Parsimonious Look at Neural Oscillations in
Speech Perception Sarah Tune, and Jonas Obleser Extracting Language
Content From Speech Sounds: The Information Theoretic Approach
Laura Gwilliams, and Matthew H. Davis Speech Perception under
Adverse Listening Conditions Stephen C. Van Hedger, and Ingrid S.
Johnsrude Adaptive Plasticity in Perceiving Speech Sounds Shruti
Ullas, Milene Bonte, Elia Formisano, and Jean Vroomen Development
of Speech Perception Judit Gervain Interactions Between Audition
and Cognition in Hearing Loss and Aging Chad S. Rogers, and
Jonathan E. Peelle Dr. Lori Holt is a Professor of Psychology at
Carnegie Mellon University and has affiliations with the Center for
the Neural Basis of Cognition and the Center for Neuroscience
University of Pittsburgh. Dr. Jonathan E. Peelle is a Professor in
the Department of Otolaryngology at the Washington University in
St. Louis. Dr. Allison Coffin is an Associate Professor in the
Department of Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience at Washington
State University Vancouver. Dr. Arthur N. Popper is Professor
Emeritus and research professor in the Department of Biology at the
University of Maryland, College Park. Dr. Richard R. Fay is
Distinguished Research Professor of Psychology at Loyola, Chicago.
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