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deafness
(redirected from Deaf history)

   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

deafness

Partial or total deficit of hearing in either ear. Of assistance are hearing aids, lip-reading, a cochlear implant in the ear in combination with a special electronic processor, sign language, and ‘cued speech’ (manual clarification of ambiguous lip movement during speech). Approximately 10% of people worldwide experience some hearing difficulties. This amounts to approximately 28 million people in the USA alone.

Conductive deafness is due to faulty conduction of sound inwards from the external ear, usually due to infection (see otitis), or a hereditary abnormality of the bones of the inner ear (see otosclerosis).

Perceptive deafness may be inborn or caused by injury or disease of the cochlea, auditory nerve, or the hearing centres in the brain. It becomes more common with age.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
RSS is easy to follow and self-paced; and, just as many sign language instructors advise students to meet people in the deaf community, RSS takes students on a video tour through deaf history, enabling them to meet important historical figures, learn about critical events in the deaf community and hear divergent opinions on controversial matters.
Scholars in Deaf history offer one approach to this issue by examining the community through a cultural lens rather than a medical or pathological interpretation.
Another popular magazine, Hearing Health, also includes many good articles about deaf heroes and deaf history, although the name of the magazine may be misleading, as readers may think that the magazine focuses on only hearing loss and hearing health care.
 
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