16 Papers
7 Citations
Yihsin Tai is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tinnitus & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 10 publications. Previous affiliations of Yihsin Tai include Ball State University.
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Papers
The Role of Cognitive Control in Tinnitus and Its Relation to Speech-in-Noise Performance.
Yihsin Tai,Fatima T. Husain +1 more
- 01 Jan 2019
TL;DR: It is suggested that future studies should aim at incorporating SiN tests with various subjective and objective methods that evaluate cognitive performance to better understand the relationship between SiN difficulties and cognitive control in tinnitus patients.
Assessing mindfulness-based cognitive therapy intervention for tinnitus using behavioural measures and structural MRI: a pilot study
Fatima T. Husain,Benjamin Zimmerman,Yihsin Tai,Megan K. Finnegan,Emily Kay,Faaiza Khan,Christopher Menard,Robyn L. Gobin +7 more
TL;DR: A minimally-modified version of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy is used to treat symptoms of distress associated with tinnitus and suggests that neuroanatomical changes may reflect reductions in tinnitis-related severity.
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Replicability of Neural and Behavioral Measures of Tinnitus Handicap in Civilian and Military Populations: Preliminary Results
Fatima T. Husain,Sara A. Schmidt,Yihsin Tai,Elsa C Granato,Pedro Ramos,Paul Sherman,Carlos R. Esquivel +6 more
TL;DR: The results show that resting-state fMRI measures are replicable and reliable in patients with a subjective condition, although some networks and functional connections may be more stable than others.
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An Inverse Relationship Between Gray Matter Volume and Speech-in-Noise Performance in Tinnitus Patients with Normal Hearing Sensitivity
TL;DR: Even with clinically defined normal hearing and comparable SiN performance relative to controls, tinnitus appears to change the association between SiN recognition and regional GM volume, which may reflect compensatory mechanisms utilized by individuals withTinnitus who maintain behavioral performance.
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Association Between Tinnitus Pitch and Consonant Recognition in Noise.
Yihsin Tai,Fatima T. Husain +1 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the effect of tinnitus on consonant recognition in noise may involve higher level functions more than perceptual characteristics ofTinnitus, and future speech-in-noise studies should incorporate cognitive tests and, possibly, brain imaging to parse out the contribution of cognitive factors, such as cognitive control, in speech- in-Noise in tinn Titus.
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