Hearing Sciences
 

Image of Jack Holman

Jack Holman

Senior Research Fellow, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences

Contact

Biography

I am a Senior Research Fellow at the UoN Hearing Sciences - Scottish Section, based at the Royal Infirmary in Glasgow. My fellowship is funded by the Medical Research Foundation investigating social and emotional well-being measurement and outcomes for people with hearing loss.

I graduated from the University of Glasgow with an undergraduate MA in Psychology and an MSc in Brain Imaging Methods. Following this I worked as a Research Assistant at the MRC/CSO Institute of Hearing Research, before completing my PhD at the University of Nottingham, supervised by Professor Graham Naylor and Professor Avril Drummond.

During undergraduate and masters my research focused primarily on Trichotillomania and the neural oscillatory correlates of anxiety. Following my RA work I developed a keen interest in auditory impairment and rehabilitation, and the underlying psychology. My previous work examined the relationship between hearing loss, hearing aid fitting and fatigue.

In addition to my Medical Research Foundation fellowship titled "Socioemotional well-being as an individual factor in the assessment and amelioration of hearing loss", I am also involved in a project funded by the Hearing Industry Research Consortium investigating the impact of hearing loss on emotion, and the subsequent emotional impact of hearing aid fitting using ecological momentary assessment.

Expertise Summary

Hearing science

Fatigue and listening effort

Well-being

Longitudinal assessment

Qualitative research: Interviews and focus groups

Systematic review and data synthesis

Ecological momentary assessment ( EMA )

Social network analysis: social activity, relationships, support

Hearing aid evaluation and innovation

Research Summary

Currently I am undertaking a fellowship funded by the Medical Research Foundation titled "Socioemotional well-being as an individual factor in the assessment and amelioration of hearing loss".

I am also involved in a project funded by the Hearing Industry Research Consortium investigating the impact of hearing loss on emotion, and the subsequent emotional impact of hearing aid fitting using ecological momentary assessment.

Selected Publications

Past Research

I am predominantly interested in auditory impairment and rehabilitation, and the underlying psychology. Previously I examined the relationship between hearing loss, hearing aid fitting and fatigue. Using methods such as longitudinal assessment and semi-structured interviews I also investigated the impact of hearing loss and hearing aid fitting on social, work and physical activity.

Hearing Sciences

Mental Health & Clinical Neuroscience
School of Medicine
University of Nottingham
Medical School, QMC
Nottingham, NG7 2UH


telephone: University Park +44 (0) 115 74 86900
Ropewalk House +44 (0) 115 82 32600
Glasgow +44 (0) 141 242 9665
email: hearing-research@nottingham.ac.uk