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41
Suppression in Otoacoustic Emissions Evoked by Closely-spaced Two-tone Burst Stimuli
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2008)
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42
Origin of Suppression of Otoacoustic Emissions Evoked by Two-Tone Bursts
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2008)
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43
Influence of Monaural Overstimulation in Cochlear Function in Normal- hearing Adults Measured Psychoacoustically and with Spontaneous and Distortion Product Otoacoustic Emissions
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2008)
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44
Distortion-product Otoacoustic Emissions in Patients with Low-frequency Sensorineural Hearing Loss
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2007)
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45
Relationship Between Hearing Sensitivity and Distortion-product Otoacoustic Emissions in Patients with Low-frequency Sensorineural Hearing Loss
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2007)
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46
Otoacoustic Emissions and High-frequency Hearing Sensitivity
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2007)
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47
Otoacoustic Emissions: Recent Advances in Research and in Clinical Applications
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2007)
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48
Acoustic Foundations of Signal Enhancement and Room Acoustics
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2007)
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49
Otoacoustic Emission Testing in Children
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2007)
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50
Contralateral Suppression of Otoacoustic Emissions
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2006)
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51
Influence of Salicylate on Cochlear Function: Monaural Sensitivity Thresholds and Otoacoustic Emissions
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2006)
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52
Spontaneous and Distortion Product Otoacoustic Emissions and Extended High-frequency Hearing Sensitivity
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2006)
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53
Time-course of Contralateral Suppression of Spontaneous Otoacoustic Emissions
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2006)
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54
Otoacoustic Emissions and Extended High-Frequency Hearing Sensitivity in Young Adults
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2005)
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55
Lateralization Performance in Normal-hearing Adults Evaluated During Short-term Induced Asymmetrical Changes of Auditory Periphery
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2005)
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56
Effects of Age, Age-Related Hearing Loss, and Contralateral Cafeteria Noise on the Discrimination of Small Frequency Changes: Psychoacoustic and Electrophysiological Measures
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2005)
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57
Adaptation of Lateralization Performance to Short-term Induced Conductive and Sensorineural Changes
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2005)
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58
Influence of Monaural Overstimulation on Binaural Performance Measured with an Intracranial Image Task
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2004)
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59
Test-Retest Reliability of Pure-Tone Thresholds from 0.5 to 16 kHz using Sennheiser HDA 200 and Etymotic Research ER-2 Earphones
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2004)
Abstract: Objective The purposes of the study were: (1) To evaluate the intrasession test-retest reliability of pure-tone thresholds measured in the 0.5–16 kHz frequency range for a group of otologically healthy subjects using Sennheiser HDA 200 circumaural and Etymotic Research ER-2 insert earphones and (2) to compare the data with existing criteria of significant threshold shifts related to ototoxicity and noise-induced hearing loss. Design Auditory thresholds in the frequency range from 0.5 to 6 kHz and in the extended high-frequency range from 8 to 16 kHz were measured in one ear of 138 otologically healthy subjects (77 women, 61 men; mean age, 24.4 yr; range, 12–51 yr) using HDA 200 and ER-2 earphones. For each subject, measurements of thresholds were obtained twice for both transducers during the same test session. For analysis, the extended high-frequency range from 8 to 16 kHz was subdivided into 8 to 12.5 and 14 to 16 kHz ranges. Data for each frequency and frequency range were analyzed separately. Results There were no significant differences in repeatability for the two transducer types for all frequency ranges. The intrasession variability increased slightly, but significantly, as frequency increased with the greatest amount of variability in the 14 to 16 kHz range. Analyzing each individual frequency, variability was increased particularly at 16 kHz. At each individual frequency and for both transducer types, intrasession test-retest repeatability from 0.5 to 6 kHz and 8 to 16 kHz was within 10 dB for >99% and >94% of measurements, respectively. The results indicated a false-positive rate of Conclusion Repeatability was similar for both transducer types. Intrasession test-retest repeatability from 0.5 to 12.5 kHz at each individual frequency including the frequency range susceptible to noise-induced hearing loss was excellent for both transducers. Repeatability was slightly, but significantly poorer in the frequency range from 14 to 16 kHz compared with the frequency ranges from 0.5 to 6 or 8 to 12.5 kHz. Measurements in the extended high-frequency range from 8 to 14 kHz, but not up to 16 kHz, may be recommended for monitoring purposes.
Keyword: audiology; Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology; pure tone thresholds; Speech and Hearing Science; Speech Pathology and Audiology; test-retest reliability
URL: https://doi.org/10.1097/01.AUD.0000120361.87401.C8
https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/1987
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60
Performance of Otoacoustic Emission Tests when Used to Predict Auditory Status
In: ETSU Faculty Works (2004)
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