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1. Merging two eDNA metabarcoding approaches and citizen-science-based sampling to facilitate fish community monitoring along vast Sub-Saharan coastlines.

2. Is COVID-19 to Blame for Sensorineural Hearing Deterioration? A Pre/Post COVID-19 Hearing Evaluation Study.

3. Auditory Performance in Recovered SARS-COV-2 Patients.

4. The Effect of Soft Tissue Stimulation on Skull Vibrations and Hearing Thresholds in Humans.

5. Occlusion Effect in Response to Stimulation by Soft Tissue Conduction-Implications.

6. Audiogram in Response to Stimulation Delivered to Fluid Applied to the External Meatus.

7. Implications for Bone Conduction Mechanisms from Thresholds of Post Radical Mastoidectomy and Subtotal Petrosectomy Patients.

8. Does hearing in response to soft-tissue stimulation involve skull vibrations? A within-subject comparison between skull vibration magnitudes and hearing thresholds.

9. Inner Ear Excitation in Normal and Postmastoidectomy Participants by Fluid Stimulation in the Absence of Air- and Bone-Conduction Mechanisms.

10. Soft tissue conduction as a possible contributor to the limited attenuation provided by hearing protection devices.

11. Bone Conduction Thresholds without Bone Vibrator Application Force.

12. Air, bone and soft tissue excitation of the cochlea in the presence of severe impediments to ossicle and window mobility.

13. Experimental Analysis of the Mechanism of Hearing under Water.

14. Relation between Body Structure and Hearing during Soft Tissue Auditory Stimulation.

15. Air conduction, bone conduction, and soft tissue conduction audiograms in normal hearing and simulated hearing losses.

16. The mechanism of direct stimulation of the cochlea by vibrating the round window.

17. Investigation of the mechanism of soft tissue conduction explains several perplexing auditory phenomena.

18. Assessment of inner ear bone vibrations during auditory stimulation by bone conduction and by soft tissue conduction.

19. Mutual cancellation between tones presented by air conduction, by bone conduction and by non-osseous (soft tissue) bone conduction.

20. Experimental confirmation that vibrations at soft tissue conduction sites induce hearing by way of a new mode of auditory stimulation.

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