Semin Hear 2004; 25(1): 39-49
DOI: 10.1055/s-2004-823046
Copyright © 2004 by Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc., 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.
Electrophysiological Evidence for Binaural Processing in Auditory Evoked Potentials: The Binaural Interaction Component
Cynthia G. Fowler1
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1Professor, Department of Communicative Disorders, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin
Tribute to Tom Tillman
When I think back on Tom Tillman as I knew him at Northwestern University, I do so with admiration and respect. He was a clinician, a scholar, a scientist, and a teacher, with a rare breadth of knowledge and historical appreciation of the field of audiology. He participated in the early development of audiology, specializing in speech perception and masking, and closed his career working with cochlear implants. Somewhere in the middle, he served on my doctoral committee, contributing his perspective on the developing field of auditory evoked potentials and its relation to auditory perception. So, in contributing the present manuscript to this issue of Seminars dedicated to Tom Tillman, I am hoping that he would have appreciated the fact that I still believe that perceptual processes can be tapped with electrophysiological responses.