- Oct 24, 2017
- 849
- Tinnitus Since
- 10/2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- one-sided hearing loss (of unknown origin)
What is this about?
Many of you are not satisfied with tinnitus research, or the lack thereof. Many of you also feel that current research efforts do not meet your needs – and rightly so. We want to change that.
Tinnitus Hub, the non-profit behind Tinnitus Talk, has been spending many hundreds of hours over the past years (all volunteer time) to foster close relations with tinnitus researchers and inspire them to involve people with tinnitus directly in their research.
We who suffer from tinnitus want our voices to be heard and steer research in a meaningful direction.
What can YOU do?
This is your chance to make a difference. In the poll above, cast your vote for whatever YOU think is the most valuable academic paper on tinnitus published in October 2020.
This is a democratic vote to determine what were the most interesting, inspiring, and useful research papers published in a one-month period. You can select only one paper. Attached is a PDF with more details on the papers and links to their abstracts.
What will happen with the voting results?
The outcomes will be shared with and heard by the research community. This will send off a clear signal about what kind of research we – as the tinnitus community – value.
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.
We know 20 papers is a long list to digest. Any advice on how to make the voting process easier in future is much appreciated.
[FYI, we had to shorten some titles in the poll because of the character limit; the attached PDF contains full titles and links.]
* 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.