Yes. Sorry, I timed myself, but I guess I spoke a bit more slowly in the room.
As I mentioned, much research needs to be done, especially in this setting of interpreters. As I mentioned, I've treated patients in other fields who suffer with similar symptoms.
I was just talking to one of the interpreters outside, before I came in. I've never met a single interpreter, in 10 years of work, and neither have any of my colleagues who are also ear specialists at the hospital. It's a little bit interesting. Certainly, lots of research needs to be done. I think it would only be comprehensive if it involved specialists like me, audiologists with an interest like Dr. Fournier's, and cognitive specialists as well, because that's a big part of it.
We see a corollary in these kinds of symptoms in the dizziness world, where patients are exposed to certain noxious stimuli and end up having chronic dizziness from that. Many of the symptoms in ASI are very similar. The trigger was just an acoustic injury. There's probably a lot of cross-learning available on that side.