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- BookRuth Y. Litovsky, Matthew J. Goupell, Richard R. Fay, Arthur N. Popper, editors.Summary: This volume provides an up-to-date reference on the developments and novel ideas in the field of binaural hearing. The primary readership for the volume are specialists in the diverse fields such as psychoacoustics, neuroscience, engineering, psychology, audiology, hearing aids, and cochlear implants.
Contents:
Ch 1: Binaural Processing of Sounds
Ch 2: Localization and Lateralization of Sound
Ch 3: Sound Source Localization Is a Multisystem Process
Ch 4: Anatomy and Physiology of the Avian Binaural System
Ch 5: Binaural Hearing by the Mammalian Auditory Brainstem: Joint Coding of Interaural Level and Time Differences by the Lateral Superior Olive
Ch 6: Binaural Hearing with Temporally Complex Signals
Ch 7: Binaural Hearing and Across-Channel Processing
Ch 8: Binaural Unmasking and Spatial Release from Masking
Ch 9: Spatial Hearing in Rooms and Effects of Reverberation
Ch 10: Computational Models of Binaural Processing
Ch 11: Clinical Ramifications of the Effects of Hearing Impairment and Aging on Spatial and Binaural Hearing
Ch 12: Physiology of Higher Central Auditory Processing and Plasticity
Ch 13: Binaural Hearing with Devices. - ArticlePimentel E.Ann Endocrinol (Paris). 1978;39(2):117-26.At present it is not possible to describe the precise sequence of post-transductional phenomena corresponding to the action of any hormone in a given target cell. It seems probable that different events at the levels of DNA replication, DNA transcription, RNA translation, and post-translational phenomena are regulated in each case in a specific sequential way. However, the possibility cannot be discarded of simultaneous and/or independent hormone actions in two or more of these type of phenomena.