Is this aspect of tinnitus science actually settled? I'm not so sure, and I don't believe I've ever heard a convincing argument yet about what tinnitus really is (on a biological level) and why it occurs. In fact, this has been my main bugbear over the years. We have prominent tinnitus researchers and "experts" attempting to cure/treat something they can't even define on a causal level or even measure. Hence my oft used, "We're the wall they're throwing sh*t at" simile.
Because no one knows, but the research Dr. Shore built has at the very least identified one of the first pathways that tinnitus is reproduced/sustained in the brain. That
is progress.
The brain is an incredibly complex organ that we do not understand as a species.
I know that can be hard to fathom when you have nanobots literally being shoved up peoples asses to fix other conditions, but there are reasons for that. If you take a wrong turn with the wrong drug in the brain, you can permanently or terminally disable someone. Even worse,
everyone's brain is unique. It's also an invisible disability. A small amount of the population (concentrated on these boards) has tinnitus AND is bothered significantly by it.
Also, think about it -- you're not going to have the Gee Whiz Nobel Prize winners in the field of tinnitus. Why would you focus an entire career on that when there are so many more lucrative specialties and opportunities for research? Dr. Shore should be respected for her successful body of work -- even if this device falls completely flat on its face, she has an inarguably advanced understanding of how tinnitus originates. The same question you ask, and that likely has to be answered before you can ask how to fix it.
Are you going to trust someone throwing shit at a wall, or someone who at least has decades of scientific research with reproducible results indicating they know the velocity/angle to throw the shit to have a shot of making it stick?
Don't get me wrong -- I'm as pessimistic as people come. I am under no illusion that there will be a cure or even meaningful treatment in my lifetime, as I think that would drive me mad(der). The field of tinnitus is sorely under-researched, and otology is in the dark ages. But I would rather cheerlead the .01% chance of success backed by solid evidence, no matter how long it takes, if it's produced by research.
Shore isn't the only scientist to have targeted the DCN, and even if the blueprint of her decades-long research fails, it's still a blueprint that someone doesn't have to change much to improve
next time.
Perhaps when one of the other sexier conditions progresses, some dots will start to connect with the precept of tinnitus/retention, and it won't take decades of research to progress this field further from Jastreblowhard.
I understand how debilitating this condition is and the urgency for some people to stop the pain. But honestly, look around Tinnitus Talk in treatments. This is at least genuine hope for progress (including the device's failure) and not some failed drug trial withering in East Nowheresville with some venture capitalist.