50 results on '"Hood JD"'
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2. Societies' proceedings
3. Tone decay test in neuro-otological diagnosis
4. The significance of peripheral vision in the perception of movement.
5. Measurement of noise.
6. [Recent study on auditory adaptation and its relationship to the recruitment phenomenon].
7. Fatigue and adaptation of hearing.
8. Recent advances in the study of the loudness recruitment and allied phenomenon.
9. Auditory adaptation and its relationship to clinical tests of auditory function.
10. A comparative study of loudness recruitment in cases of deafness due to Meniere's disease, head injury and acoustic trauma.
11. Observations upon the nervous mechanism of vestibular habituation.
12. Observations upon the loudness recruitment phenomenon, with especial reference to the differential diagnosis of disorders of the internal ear and 8th nerve.
13. Observations upon the neurological mechanism of the loudness recruitment phenomenon.
14. The principles and practice of bone conduction audiometry: A review of the present position.
15. The principles and practice of bone conduction audiometry: a review of the present position.
16. Auditory fatigue and adaptation in the differential diagnosis of end-organ disease.
17. Basic audiological requirements in neuro-otology.
18. The speed of the slow component of ocular nystagmus induced by angular acceleration of the head: its experimental determination and application to the physical theory of the cupular mechanism.
19. The investigation of vestibular function.
20. Persistence of response in the caloric test.
21. Tone decay test in neuro-otological diagnosis.
22. Bone conduction: a review of the present position with especial reference to the contributions of Dr. Georg von Bekesy.
23. Observations upon the neurological mechanism of optokinetic nystagmus with especial reference to the contribution of peripheral vision.
24. The significance of optic fixation in tests of vestibular function.
25. Further observations upon the neurological mechanism of optokinetic nystagmus.
26. Some further observations upon the effect of unilateral cerebral lesions on caloric and rotational nystagmus.
27. Fatigue and adaptation of the cupular mechanism of the human horizontal semicircular canal: an experimental investigation.
28. Modern masking techniques and their application to the diagnosis of functional deafness.
29. Symmetrical hearing loss in brain stem lesions.
30. Auditory adaptation; its experimental investigation in the human subject.
31. [Tone decay and the otoneurological diagnosis].
32. Recent advances in the electro-nystagmographic investigation of neurological disorders of ocular movement.
33. Rebound nystagmus.
34. Vestibular habituation, its clinical significance and relationship to vestibular neuronitis.
35. Observations upon the loudness recruitment phenomenon, with special reference to the differential diagnosis of disorders of the internal ear and eighth nerve.
36. Nerve deafness; its clinical criteria, old and new.
37. Modern developments in pure tone audiometry and their application to the clinical diagnosis of end-organ deafness.
38. Discussion on scope and application of current audiometric tests.
39. Studies in auditory fatigue and adaptation.
40. Observations upon the effects of repeated stimulation upon rotational and caloric nystagmus.
41. The design, construction and performance of a new type of revolving chair; some experimental results and their application to the physical theory of the cupular mechanism.
42. A recent clinico-pathological study of cochlear nerve degeneration resulting from tumor pressure and disseminated sclerosis, with particular reference to the finding of normal threshold sensitivity for pure tones.
43. Auditory adaptation in the human subject.
44. The neuro-physiological significance of cupular adaptation and its bearing upon Ewald's second Law.
45. The clinical significance of vestibular habituation.
46. Electro-nystagmography.
47. Some observations on the technical and clinical problems of electro-nystagmography.
48. Observations upon the relationship of loudness discomfort level and auditory fatigue to sound-pressure level and sensation level.
49. Tolerable limit of loudness: its clinical and physiological significance.
50. ELECTRO-NYSTAGMOGRAPHY AND ITS USES IN THE STUDY OF SPONTANEOUS NYSTAGMUS.
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