“…Approximately 2% of the general population experience a severely impaired quality of life due to this condition and rely on professional medical, psychological, or psychiatric help (Axelsson and Ringdahl, 1989;Langguth, 2012). Although many theories have been proposed concerning the etiology, the neuronal fingerprint of primary tinnitus is the altered spectral power of electroencephalography (EEG) or magnetoencephalography signals (Weisz et al, 2005;Dohrmann et al, 2007;Kahlbrock and Weisz, 2008;Ortmann et al, 2011;Adamchic, Langguth, et al, 2014;Adamchic, Toth, et al, 2014;Eggermont and Tass, 2015) observable over a large network of brain areas (Schlee et al, 2008;2009;Silchenko et al, 2013;Sedley et al, 2015) A number of distinct therapeutic options have been proposed for the management of primary tinnitus (Tunkel et al, 2014) including cognitive behavioral therapy (Martinez-Devesa et al, 2010), hearing aids (Hoare et al, 2014), cochlear implants (Arts et al, 2015), sound maskers (Hobson et al, 2012), tinnitus retraining therapy (Phillips and McFerran, 2010), medications (Hoekstra et al, 2011;Baldo et al, 2012;Hilton et al, 2013), vitamins and dietary supplements, hyperbaric oxygen (Bennett et al, 2012), acupuncture (Kim et al, 2012), and neuromodulation therapy (Langguth and De Ridder, 2013). Currently, there is no standard of care and the published studies have large variability in outcomes and large differences in intervention protocols within a single type of intervention.…”