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Robert Cowan

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  198
Citations -  5210

Robert Cowan is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cochlear implant & Migraine. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 188 publications receiving 4215 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert Cowan include Bionics Institute & Huntington Medical Research Institutes.

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Migraine affects 1 in 10 people worldwide featuring recent rise: A systematic review and meta-analysis of community-based studies involving 6 million participants.

TL;DR: The result showed a pattern of rising global migraine prevalence, which affects one in ten people worldwide featuring recent rise among females, students, and urban residents.
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Impact of a neuroscience intensive care unit on neurosurgical patient outcomes and cost of care: evidence-based support for an intensivist-directed specialty ICU model of care.

TL;DR: The data suggest that a neuroscience specialty ICU arena staffed by specialty-trained intensivists and nurses is beneficial, and patients treated in the NSICU had shorter hospital stays and lower total costs of care than a national benchmark.
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Outcomes of early- and late-identified children at 3 years of age: findings from a prospective population-based study.

TL;DR: Whereas the effect of age of hearing aid fitting on child outcomes was weak, a younger age at cochlear implant switch-on was significantly associated with better outcomes for children with cochLear implants at 3 years of age.
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Spatial spread of neural excitation in cochlear implant recipients: comparison of improved ECAP method and psychophysical forward masking.

TL;DR: A method for measurement of the longitudinal spread of electrically evoked neural excitation in the cochlea, using the Neural Response Telemetry system (NRT) available with the Nucleus 24 cochlear implant system is introduced and good agreement was found.
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Long-term Communication Outcomes for Children Receiving Cochlear Implants Younger Than 12 Months: A Multicenter Study.

TL;DR: Results support provision of cochlear implants younger than 12 months of age for children with severe to profound hearing loss to optimize speech perception and subsequent language acquisition and speech production accuracy.