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Transcripts For WFXT FOX 25 Weekend Morning News 20161106

center and even when the rain moves out it will be cloudy and cool today? that is the theme today and there will be another chance for another shower later today. i have been tracking the rain moving out of boston but the south shore. the the cape, the islands are going to be stuck in this light, occasionally moderate rain, moving southeastward around 20 miles per hour. so, you are going to have itaround marshfield to chatham, keep the umbrella on hand this morning. temperatures are in the 40s. in most locations as we go to noontime, another batch of a few showers hitting likely to be developing here, and so we will keep it on the cloudier and cooler side today. upper 40s and lower 50s for those highs, back with more on where to expect rain for the rest of the your day coming up. developing this morning, another harvard sports team hit with scandal. fox 25 s stephanie coueignoux is live in cambridge this morning. morning. the men s cross country team is accused to of cr

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Transcripts For KQED Charlie Rose 20131012

captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. what happened? what happened? hi, jade! i, jade! is that mom you re hearing? yes! what happened? mama! right. i understand! uh-huh! it opened up. rose: helen keller once said blindness separates us from thing but deafness separates us from people. hearing loss affects 48 million americans. that is 15% of the population. most of those cases are currently untreated. in recent years there have been break throughs in the treatment of hearing loss. ingeborg hochmair helped pioneer development of the cochlear implant. the device stimulates the main auditor nerve that sends message to the brain to signal hearing. she recently received an award for her work and she joins me along with one of her patients, max. max received the implant at the age of two. he is now 19 years old and about to begin college. also joining me, a distinguished group of scientists, david corey of

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Transcripts For KQED Charlie Rose 20131014

captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. what happened? what happened? hi, jade! i, jade! is that mom you re hearing? yes! what happened? mama! right. i understand! uh-huh! it opened up. rose: helen keller once said blindness separates us from thing but deafness separates us from people. hearing loss affects 48 million americans. that is 15% of the population. most of those cases are currently untreated. in recent years there have been break throughs in the treatment of hearing loss. ingeborg hochmair helped pioneer development of the cochlear implant. the device stimulates the main auditor nerve that sends message to the brain to signal hearing. she recently received an award for her work and she joins me along with one of her patients, max. max received the implant at the age of two. he is now 19 years old and about to begin college. also joining me, a distinguished group of scientists, david corey of

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Transcripts For WHUT Charlie Rose 20131012

signal which is eventually something the brain can understand. the third idea is a bit difficult, and this is to understand that each sound is actually made up of a lot of different sounds, a lot of different tones that happen simultaneously and for the brain to understand a sound it has to break the sound into its different parts and then those different channels of information have to go to the brain separately. rose: and when something goes wrong, what happens? when something goes wrong and we might return to this of things that happen and really we should return to it later. and maybe i should continue. rose: okay, continue, you have some slides. and let me show you quickly where this happens in the head. so the outer here carries the sound into the eardrum and then it s carried through the middle ear to finally reach the inner ear where the cochlea is. the cochlea is the organ that does this conversion to a neural signal and then the auditory nerve carries that

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Transcripts For WHUT Charlie Rose 20131012

something the brain can understand. the third idea is a bit difficult, and this is to understand that each sound is actually made up of a lot of different sounds, a lot of different tones that happen simultaneously and for the brain to understand a sound it has to break the sound into its different parts and then those different channels of information have to go to the brain separately. rose: and when something goes wrong, what happens? when something goes wrong and we might return to this of things that happen and really we should return to it later. and maybe i should continue. rose: okay, continue, you have some slides. and let me show you quickly where this happens in the head. so the outer here carries the sound into the eardrum and then it s carried through the middle ear to finally reach the inner ear where the cochlea is. the cochlea is the organ that does this conversion to a neural signal and then the auditory nerve carries that signal to the brain. here y

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