Susan Shore


Susan Ellen Shore is an American audiologist who is the Merle Lawrence Collegiate Professor of Otolaryngology at the University of Michigan. She was elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2021.

Early life and education

Shore was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, and pursued her bachelor's and master's degrees at the University of the Witwatersrand. She first specialized in pathology and audiology before starting a master's in hearing science. Her research considers dichotic listening. After completing her master's, she joined the Kresge [Hearing Research Institute] at Louisiana State University. Her doctoral research involved studying how the cochlea responds to frequency-varying signals. After earning her doctorate, Shore joined the University of Pittsburgh as research fellow.

Research and career

In 2005, Shore joined Michigan Medicine, where she started a research group investigating auditory processing. She was particularly interested in the contributions of multisensory systems. Shore identified that certain neurons, which receive input from the face and head, were sensitive to touch. These somatosensory neurons send signals to the cochlear nucleus and make it respond to sound. She showed that the somatosensory neurons interact with the nucleus even more acutely after deafness, likely to compensate for the conventional cochlea input. The increase in somatosensory excitations can result in the development of tinnitus, a condition that impacts around 15% of Americans. As Chair of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the American Tinnitus Association, Shore testified before the United States [House of Representatives] in support of the Tinnitus Research and Treatment Act in 2013.
Shore has investigated synaptic plasticity and the longitudinal nature of these neural changes. She proposed a precise pattern of simulations that can be used to reverse this process. This strategy, targeted bimodal auditory-somatosensory stimulation, which involved a series of sounds coupled with precisely timed electrical pulses. This combination can launch a process called stimulus-timing dependent plasticity. Specifically, the Auricle looks to reprogram the fusiform cells of the dorsal cochlear nucleus.
Shore was named the Merle Lawrence Collegiate Professor of Otolaryngology Research at the University of Michigan in 2021.

Awards and honors

Selected publications

  • Gerilyn R. Jones, David T. Martel, Travis L. Riffle, Josh Errickson, Jacqueline R. Souter, Gregory J. Basura, Emily Stucken, Kara C. Schvartz-Leyzac, Susan E. Shore. "Reversing synchronized brain circuits using targeted auditory-somatosensory stimulation to treat phantom percepts: a randomized clinical trial" JAMA Network Open, 2023; 6 : e2315914 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.15914
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