09-11, 17:30–18:00 (Europe/Istanbul), Hearing Aids 1
To discuss the clinical relevance of rehabilitative support in patients with mild hearing loss, emphasizing its impact on cognitive load, listening effort, and quality of life.
To discuss the clinical relevance of rehabilitative support in patients with mild hearing loss, emphasizing its impact on cognitive load, listening effort, and quality of life
Serpil Mungan Durankaya is an academic and specialist working in the field of audiology. Her work focuses on experimental audiology, pediatric and geriatric auditory rehabilitation, and balance and vestibular assessment. In addition to clinical practice, she is actively involved in scientific research, thesis supervision, and professional awareness activities. She presents her work at national and international scientific meetings and contributes to the field of hearing health through multidisciplinary approaches.
I graduated from the Faculty of Medicine at Ankara University in 1992. I completed specialty training in 1996, which I started in 1992, and became an Otorhinolaryngologist. I was awarded the Certificate of Otorhinolaryngology Board Exam in 2008, the title of Associate Professor in 2009, the Certificate of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in 2012, and the title of Professor in 2016. I have been serving in my own private office since October 2021.
- Understanding Hearing and Vestibular Function Through Bayesian Brain Theory: From Perception to Adaptation
- Energy Management in Hearing Aids: Rechargeable Batteries and Sustainability
- Computational Audiology in Hearing Aid
- RHINOPLASTY IN DEVIATED NOSES
- Empty Nose Syndrome: Facts and Challenges in Practice
- A Multisensory Clinical Perspective on Auditory, Vestibular, and Oculomotor Function