- Oct 24, 2017
- 849
- Tinnitus Since
- 10/2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- one-sided hearing loss (of unknown origin)
We're back with another round of research voting!
You get to have your say again and select ONE research paper from the total list tinnitus-related academic papers published last month.
What should you do?
Review the attached PDF. It contains the titles of all tinnitus related papers published in January 2021, with links to the online papers or abstracts.
NEW: We added brief descriptions of each paper, to make it easier for you to select one!
In the poll above, vote on the one paper that you believe is most valuable to those with tinnitus.
We'd like to extend a big thank you to @Frédéric for compiling the list of papers!
What will happen with the results?
We will repeat this poll every month for the entire year of 2021. This will give us a wealth of data to demonstrate what kind of research is valued most (and least) by the tinnitus community.
The aggregated data will be presented to the research community, for instance by presenting at an academic conference.
How were the papers selected?
We deliberately included all kinds of papers, so this list does not in any way represent what we value; it's just a list of papers about tinnitus.* It's up to you guys to put a value on them.
* NB: To make the list somewhat manageable, we did have to exclude some types of papers, e.g.:
- Studies where tinnitus is not the main topic;
- Studies that were previously published, i.e. we only included truly new ones;
- Pulsatile and objective tinnitus (only interesting for a very narrow audience);
- Case studies, unless they have major implications;
- Trial protocols, unless very high profile;
- Descriptive studies (e.g. describing clinical tools or state of health services);
- Studies that merely reproduce existing data, unless it's a large-scale systematic review.