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Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples?

For understanding the heterogeneity of tinnitus, large samples are required. However, investigations on how samples recruited by different methods differ from each other are lacking. In the present study, three large samples each recruited by different means were compared: N = 5017 individuals regis...

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Autores principales: Probst, Thomas, Pryss, Rüdiger C., Langguth, Berthold, Spiliopoulou, Myra, Landgrebe, Michael, Vesala, Markku, Harrison, Stephen, Schobel, Johannes, Reichert, Manfred, Stach, Michael, Schlee, Winfried
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5399071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28484389
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2017.00113
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author Probst, Thomas
Pryss, Rüdiger C.
Langguth, Berthold
Spiliopoulou, Myra
Landgrebe, Michael
Vesala, Markku
Harrison, Stephen
Schobel, Johannes
Reichert, Manfred
Stach, Michael
Schlee, Winfried
author_facet Probst, Thomas
Pryss, Rüdiger C.
Langguth, Berthold
Spiliopoulou, Myra
Landgrebe, Michael
Vesala, Markku
Harrison, Stephen
Schobel, Johannes
Reichert, Manfred
Stach, Michael
Schlee, Winfried
author_sort Probst, Thomas
collection PubMed
description For understanding the heterogeneity of tinnitus, large samples are required. However, investigations on how samples recruited by different methods differ from each other are lacking. In the present study, three large samples each recruited by different means were compared: N = 5017 individuals registered at a self-help web platform for tinnitus (crowdsourcing platform Tinnitus Talk), N = 867 users of a smart mobile application for tinnitus (crowdsensing platform TrackYourTinnitus), and N = 3786 patients contacting an outpatient tinnitus clinic (Tinnitus Center of the University Hospital Regensburg). The three samples were compared regarding age, gender, and duration of tinnitus (month or years perceiving tinnitus; subjective report) using chi-squared tests. The three samples significantly differed from each other in age, gender and tinnitus duration (p < 0.05). Users of the TrackYourTinnitus crowdsensing platform were younger, users of the Tinnitus Talk crowdsourcing platform had more often female gender, and users of both newer technologies (crowdsourcing and crowdsensing) had more frequently acute/subacute tinnitus (<3 months and 4–6 months) as well as a very long tinnitus duration (>20 years). The implications of these findings for clinical research are that newer technologies such as crowdsourcing and crowdsensing platforms offer the possibility to reach individuals hard to get in contact with at an outpatient tinnitus clinic. Depending on the aims and the inclusion/exclusion criteria of a given study, different recruiting strategies (clinic and/or newer technologies) offer different advantages and disadvantages. In general, the representativeness of study results might be increased when tinnitus study samples are recruited in the clinic as well as via crowdsourcing and crowdsensing.
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spelling pubmed-53990712017-05-08 Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples? Probst, Thomas Pryss, Rüdiger C. Langguth, Berthold Spiliopoulou, Myra Landgrebe, Michael Vesala, Markku Harrison, Stephen Schobel, Johannes Reichert, Manfred Stach, Michael Schlee, Winfried Front Aging Neurosci Neuroscience For understanding the heterogeneity of tinnitus, large samples are required. However, investigations on how samples recruited by different methods differ from each other are lacking. In the present study, three large samples each recruited by different means were compared: N = 5017 individuals registered at a self-help web platform for tinnitus (crowdsourcing platform Tinnitus Talk), N = 867 users of a smart mobile application for tinnitus (crowdsensing platform TrackYourTinnitus), and N = 3786 patients contacting an outpatient tinnitus clinic (Tinnitus Center of the University Hospital Regensburg). The three samples were compared regarding age, gender, and duration of tinnitus (month or years perceiving tinnitus; subjective report) using chi-squared tests. The three samples significantly differed from each other in age, gender and tinnitus duration (p < 0.05). Users of the TrackYourTinnitus crowdsensing platform were younger, users of the Tinnitus Talk crowdsourcing platform had more often female gender, and users of both newer technologies (crowdsourcing and crowdsensing) had more frequently acute/subacute tinnitus (<3 months and 4–6 months) as well as a very long tinnitus duration (>20 years). The implications of these findings for clinical research are that newer technologies such as crowdsourcing and crowdsensing platforms offer the possibility to reach individuals hard to get in contact with at an outpatient tinnitus clinic. Depending on the aims and the inclusion/exclusion criteria of a given study, different recruiting strategies (clinic and/or newer technologies) offer different advantages and disadvantages. In general, the representativeness of study results might be increased when tinnitus study samples are recruited in the clinic as well as via crowdsourcing and crowdsensing. Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-04-21 /pmc/articles/PMC5399071/ /pubmed/28484389 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2017.00113 Text en Copyright © 2017 Probst, Pryss, Langguth, Spiliopoulou, Landgrebe, Vesala, Harrison, Schobel, Reichert, Stach and Schlee. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Probst, Thomas
Pryss, Rüdiger C.
Langguth, Berthold
Spiliopoulou, Myra
Landgrebe, Michael
Vesala, Markku
Harrison, Stephen
Schobel, Johannes
Reichert, Manfred
Stach, Michael
Schlee, Winfried
Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples?
title Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples?
title_full Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples?
title_fullStr Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples?
title_full_unstemmed Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples?
title_short Outpatient Tinnitus Clinic, Self-Help Web Platform, or Mobile Application to Recruit Tinnitus Study Samples?
title_sort outpatient tinnitus clinic, self-help web platform, or mobile application to recruit tinnitus study samples?
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5399071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28484389
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2017.00113
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