Deaf Born and the "Inner Self"



The inner self is a term used to describe the subconscious thought of who I am and my reaction to the outside world.
Would a deaf born person turn to the direction of loud noise in your neighborhood? Is the mind that powerful to receive and send signals spontaneously that deaf humans can pick it up? Ttelepathy seems to be playing a major part of the study.
http://www.wikihow.com/Gain-Insight-Into-a-Shy-Girl%27s-Mind
http://embracingyourinnerself.com/
http://embracingyourinnerself.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/The-inner-sun-meditation.mp3
http://www.deafchildworldwide.info/

The group that a deaf born person is studying and reading with is the support group. Help to understand inner self comes from this group. Students who have deaf people in there class should not be afraid of the help of thinking how that voice that is inside all of us sound to my classmate who is deaf. Reading comes as an ease because of the majority of us who hear sounds of the world that can internalize it and process it in our brain to fully concentrate on reading or thinking. Is a deaf born person unable to concentrate as well as the average person? These are all questions that the brain may be able to answer after further studies with groups of deaf born people verses groups of not deaf born people. 
http://deafness.about.com/
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Congenital deafness is a term used to describe the condition of infants born without the ability to hear. Potential causes for this condition include both genetic factors and non-genetic factors such as illness, toxin exposure and infection.


Genetics

Genetics account for more than 50 percent of all congenital hearing loss, according to the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. Known factors include dominant and recessive hearing loss traits, as well as sex chromosome-related hearing loss traits.

Genetic FactorDeaf parents who carry a dominant gene for deafness can pass on genetically dominant hearing loss to their children, reports the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. Parents who carry a recessive deafness gene can pass on hearing loss at a lower average rate, while mothers who carry a recessive hearing loss trait on their sex chromosomes can pass deafness only to their male children.

Genetic Syndromes

The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association cites genetic syndromes known to cause deafness that include Usher syndrome, Down syndrome, Crouzon syndrome and Treacher Collins syndrome.

Gene GJB2

Changes in the gene GJB2, which helps control the function of the cochlea in the inner ear, can trigger congenital hearing loss, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Wikipedia

Non-Genetic Causes

The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association cites non-genetic causes of congenital deafness that include maternal diabetes, toxemia and maternal infection with rubella, herpes simplex or cytomegalovirus.

Source:



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