556 results on '"Auditory thresholds"'
Search Results
2. Temporal-sampling theory and language in Down syndrome: An empirical study.
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Martínez-Castilla, Pastora and López-Riobóo, Elena
- Abstract
Temporal-sampling theory argues that difficulties in the processing of syllable stress auditory markers and in lexical stress discrimination contribute to explaining the language problems of children with developmental language disorder and of those with dyslexia. The theory has not been tested in other developmental disabilities. This research sought to assess the potential of temporal-sampling theory as a framework to accounting for language difficulties in Down syndrome (DS). Thresholds for auditory markers of lexical stress, lexical stress discrimination, and receptive vocabulary were studied in teenagers and young adults with DS and in peers with other intellectual disability (ID) of unknown origin matched on chronological age and non-verbal cognition. Frequency and intensity thresholds were higher in participants with DS, and their lexical stress discrimination and receptive vocabulary skills were lower than those of the group with other ID. Lexical stress discrimination was predicted by intensity thresholds and group, while receptive vocabulary was only predicted by lexical stress discrimination. The results suggest that temporal-sampling theory is useful to explain language difficulties in individuals with DS or with other ID. This opens up new window opportunities for the design of language intervention programs in such populations. • Temporal-sampling theory was used to explain language in DS. • Lexical stress discrimination was lower in DS than in peers with other ID. • Frequency and intensity thresholds were higher in DS. • Intensity thresholds and group predicted lexical stress discrimination. • Receptive vocabulary was explained by lexical stress discrimination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Robust and Efficient Online Auditory Psychophysics.
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Zhao, Sijia, Brown, Christopher A., Holt, Lori L., and Dick, Frederic
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PSYCHOPHYSICS ,NEUROSCIENCES ,AUDITORY perception ,INTERNET ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,COMPUTER-aided diagnosis - Abstract
Most human auditory psychophysics research has historically been conducted in carefully controlled environments with calibrated audio equipment, and over potentially hours of repetitive testing with expert listeners. Here, we operationally define such conditions as having high 'auditory hygiene'. From this perspective, conducting auditory psychophysical paradigms online presents a serious challenge, in that results may hinge on absolute sound presentation level, reliably estimated perceptual thresholds, low and controlled background noise levels, and sustained motivation and attention. We introduce a set of procedures that address these challenges and facilitate auditory hygiene for online auditory psychophysics. First, we establish a simple means of setting sound presentation levels. Across a set of four level-setting conditions conducted in person, we demonstrate the stability and robustness of this level setting procedure in open air and controlled settings. Second, we test participants' tone-in-noise thresholds using widely adopted online experiment platforms and demonstrate that reliable threshold estimates can be derived online in approximately one minute of testing. Third, using these level and threshold setting procedures to establish participant-specific stimulus conditions, we show that an online implementation of the classic probe-signal paradigm can be used to demonstrate frequency-selective attention on an individual-participant basis, using a third of the trials used in recent in-lab experiments. Finally, we show how threshold and attentional measures relate to well-validated assays of online participants' in-task motivation, fatigue, and confidence. This demonstrates the promise of online auditory psychophysics for addressing new auditory perception and neuroscience questions quickly, efficiently, and with more diverse samples. Code for the tests is publicly available through Pavlovia and Gorilla. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Impairment of extra-high frequency auditory thresholds in subjects with elevated levels of fasting blood glucose
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Anindya Das, Ahmed Faisal Sumit, Nazmul Ahsan, Masashi Kato, Nobutaka Ohgami, and Anwarul Azim Akhand
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Fasting blood glucose ,Hearing impairment ,Auditory thresholds ,Extra-high frequency ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
This study was performed to assess whether there is an association between elevated Fasting Blood Glucose (FBG) and hearing impairment in Bangladeshi population. A total of 142 subjects (72 with elevated FBG; 70 control) were included in the study. The mean auditory thresholds of the control subjects at 1, 4, 8 and 12 kHz frequencies were 6.35 ± 0.35, 10.07 ± 0.91, 27.57 ± 1.82, 51.28 ± 3.01 dB SPL (decibel sound pressure level), respectively and that of the subjects with elevated FBG were 8.33 ± 0.66, 14.37 ± 1.14, 38.96 ± 2.23, and 71.11 ± 2.96 dB, respectively. The auditory thresholds of the subjects with elevated FBG were significantly (p 10 years) showed significantly (p 40 years) and younger (≤40 years) age groups compared to the respective controls. The binary logistic regression analysis showed a 5.79-fold increase in the odds of extra-high frequency hearing impairment in diabetic subjects after adjustment for age, gender and BMI. This study provides conclusive evidence that auditory threshold at an extra-high frequency could be a sensitive marker for hearing impairment in diabetic subjects.
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- 2018
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5. Auditory brainstem response to level-specific CE-CHIRP® threshold estimation in normal-hearing adults.
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Dzulkarnain, Ahmad, Shuckri, Suhaila, and Ismail, Noraidah
- Subjects
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WILCOXON signed-rank test , *BRAIN stem , *ADULTS , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *AUDIOMETRY - Abstract
Background: The aim of the present study was to compare the hearing thresholds between pure tone audiometry (PTA) and auditory brainstem response (ABR) from level-specific (LS) CE-Chirp® and click stimuli in normal adult subjects. Materials and Methods: Twenty-four adults with normal audiometric thresholds participated in the study. The ABR was recorded from the study participants at 80 dBnHL until their respective auditory thresholds using both the LS CE-Chirp® and click stimuli. Study Design and Statistical Analysis: A quasi-experimental study design was used. Audiometric thresholds (low frequencies [LFs], mid frequencies [MFs], and high frequencies [HFs]) and the ABR thresholds from both stimuli were compared using the Friedman test with Wilcoxon signed-rank test as the post hoc analysis. Results: No statistically significant difference was identified between the PTA and the ABR to LS CE-Chirp® thresholds at LFs and only small differences (<6 dB) median thresholds differences were identified at the MFs and HF. The amplitudes of wave III and V were larger for ABR to LS CE-Chirp® as compared to the ABR from the click stimulus. Conclusion: This study concluded that the ABR to LS CE-Chirp® has closer thresholds than the audiogram as compared to the ABR from click in normal-hearing adult subjects. At the suprathreshold (80 dBnHL), the ABR amplitudes of wave III, and V were larger in LS CE-Chirp® than the click stimulus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Audition: Hearing and Deafness
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Petit, Christine, El-Amraoui, Aziz, Avan, Paul, Pfaff, Donald W., editor, and Volkow, Nora D., editor
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- 2016
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7. Behavioral and neural auditory thresholds in a frog.
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Taylor, Ryan C, Akre, Karin, Wilczynski, Walter, and Ryan, Michael J
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ACOUSTIC signal detection , *BRAIN stem , *FROGS , *INFERIOR colliculus , *MESENCEPHALON - Abstract
Vocalizations play a critical role in mate recognition and mate choice in a number of taxa, especially, but not limited to, orthopterans, frogs, and birds. But receivers can only recognize and prefer sounds that they can hear. Thus a fundamental question linking neurobiology and sexual selection asks—what is the threshold for detecting acoustic sexual displays? In this study, we use 3 methods to assess such thresholds in túngara frogs: behavioral responses, auditory brainstem responses, and multiunit electrophysiological recordings from the midbrain. We show that thresholds are lowest for multiunit recordings (ca. 45 dB SPL), and then for behavioral responses (ca. 61 dB SPL), with auditory brainstem responses exhibiting the highest thresholds (ca. 71 dB SPL). We discuss why these estimates differ and why, as with other studies, it is unlikely that they should be the same. Although all of these studies estimate thresholds they are not measuring the same thresholds; behavioral thresholds are based on signal salience whereas the 2 neural assays estimate physiological thresholds. All 3 estimates, however, make it clear that to have an appreciation for detection and salience of acoustic signals we must listen to those signals through the ears of the receivers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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8. The difference a day makes: Breeding remodels hearing, hormones and behavior in female Cope's gray treefrogs (Hyla chrysoscelis).
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Gall, Megan D., Bee, Mark A., and Baugh, Alexander T.
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BREEDING , *HORMONES , *HYLA chrysoscelis , *SENSE organs , *LIFE history theory - Abstract
Abstract In seasonal breeders, there are behavioral, endocrine, and neural adaptations that promote the sexual receptivity of females and tune their sensory systems to detect and discriminate among advertising males and to successfully copulate. What happens immediately after this key life history event is unclear, but this transitional moment offers a window into the mechanisms that remodel sexual phenotypes. In this study of wild female Cope's gray treefrogs (Hyla chrysoscelis), we tested the hypothesis that oviposition results in a suite of coordinated changes in the sexual phenotype. Specifically, we predicted that sexual receptivity and discrimination behaviors would decline along with circulating concentrations of steroid hormones (corticosterone, estradiol, testosterone) and auditory sensitivity to the acoustic frequencies emphasized in male advertisement calls. We conducted these trait measurements before and after oviposition (ca. 24-h period). There was a 100% decrease in behavioral responsiveness after oviposition, and the concentrations of all three steroids plummeted during this brief window of time, especially testosterone. Moreover, higher concentrations of corticosterone—an important component of the endocrine stress response—were associated with longer response latencies, suggesting that adrenal hormones should be considered in future studies on the hormonal basis of mate choice. Counter to our prediction, auditory sensitivity increased following oviposition, and the amplitude of the auditory brainstem response was influenced by concentrations of estradiol. In pre-oviposition females auditory sensitivity diminished with increasing estradiol concentrations, while sensitivity increased with increasing estradiol concentrations in post-oviposition females, suggesting non-linear estrogenic modulation of peripheral auditory neural recruitment. Overall, our results indicate that there is considerable remodeling of behavioral output following oviposition that co-occurs with changes in both endocrine and sensory physiology. Highlights • Many seasonal breeders transition rapidly from reproductive to non-reproductive. • We measured auditory, hormonal and behavioral traits in frogs during this shift. • Peripheral auditory sensitivity increased after breeding. • Three plasma steroid hormones and behavior declined dramatically after breeding. • Overall, breeding induces rapid and coordinated phenotypic remodeling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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9. Detection of auditory signals in quiet and noisy backgrounds while performing a visuo-spatial task
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Vishakha W Rawool
- Subjects
Attention ,auditory thresholds ,distraction ,noise ,warning signals ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 ,Industrial medicine. Industrial hygiene ,RC963-969 - Abstract
Context: The ability to detect important auditory signals while performing visual tasks may be further compounded by background chatter. Thus, it is important to know how task performance may interact with background chatter to hinder signal detection. Aim: To examine any interactive effects of speech spectrum noise and task performance on the ability to detect signals. Settings and Design: The setting was a sound-treated booth. A repeated measures design was used. Materials and Methods: Auditory thresholds of 20 normal adults were determined at 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz in the following conditions presented in a random order: (1) quiet with attention; (2) quiet with a visuo-spatial task or puzzle (distraction); (3) noise with attention and (4) noise with task. Statistical Analysis: Multivariate analyses of variance (MANOVA) with three repeated factors (quiet versus noise, visuo-spatial task versus no task, signal frequency). Results: MANOVA revealed significant main effects for noise and signal frequency and significant noise–frequency and task–frequency interactions. Distraction caused by performing the task worsened the thresholds for tones presented at the beginning of the experiment and had no effect on tones presented in the middle. At the end of the experiment, thresholds (4 kHz) were better while performing the task than those obtained without performing the task. These effects were similar across the quiet and noise conditions. Conclusion: Detection of auditory signals is difficult at the beginning of a distracting visuo-spatial task but over time, task learning and auditory training effects can nullify the effect of distraction and may improve detection of high frequency sounds.
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- 2016
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10. Is it necessary to perform occupational audiometric testing at 6-months of employment?
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Alexandre Scalli Mathias Duarte, Vagner Antonio Rodrigues da Silva, Joel Lavinsky, Alexandre Caixeta Guimarães, Agrício Nubiato Crespo, Carlos Takahiro Chone, and Arthur Menino Castilho
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Male ,Employment ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Wilcoxon signed-rank test ,Audiology ,Single test ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Audiometry ,Objective audiometry ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,Medicine ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Auditory thresholds ,Aged ,Audiometric testing ,business.industry ,Significant difference ,Audiometric test ,Auditory Threshold ,Audiogram ,Hearing loss ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Test (assessment) ,Occupational Diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Noise, Occupational ,Noise-induced hearing loss ,business ,Noise - Abstract
Introduction Current Brazilian legislation requires that all workers exposed to noise are to be given an audiogram upon hiring, after 6 months of employment (first periodic test), and annually after the first periodic test. In other countries, the regulations of hearing conservation programs do not include the requirement for audiometric testing at 6 months of employment, but only annually. There is no evidence that the periodicity adopted by Brazilian legislation is the most appropriate. Objective The present study aimed to evaluate the first 3 occupational audiometric tests of workers exposed to noise. Methods Historical cohort study with cross-sectional analysis. Participants were all male metallurgy workers aged up to 40 years. The first 3 audiograms of each worker were analyzed: pre-employment audiometric test, periodic audiometric test 1, and periodic audiometric test 2. For each worker, mean frequency thresholds were calculated at 3, 4, and 6 kHz in the left and right ears for each test. Statistical analysis was performed using the nonparametric Wilcoxon test. Results A total of 988 workers were included. There was a significant difference in auditory thresholds between the pre-employment test and the 2 subsequent periodic tests for the right and left ears. There was no significant difference between Test1 and Test2 in either ear. Conclusion Given the lack of difference between the first 2 periodic tests, we believe that they could be merged into a single test, i.e., first periodic audiometric testing could be performed at 12 months of employment without compromising workers’ health.
- Published
- 2022
11. Umbral auditivo en pacientes pediátricos mediante audiometría por reforzamiento visual con base en los potenciales auditivos de estado estable.
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De la O-Gómez, Ana Teresa, Gutiérrez-Farfán, Ileana, Arch-Tirado, Emilio, Gutiérrez-Canencia, Úrsula, and Luisa Lino-González, Ana
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The visual reinforcement audiometry and steady-state evoked potential are tests that allow to identify auditory thresholds. OBJECTIVE: To compare the date obtained throw the visual reinforcement audiometry and the steady-state evoked potential in the determination of the auditory threshold in pediatric patients. MATERIAL AND METHOD: A cross-sectional, comparative, observational and descriptive study was done from February to September 2017 in children participating in a visual reinforcement audiometry and a steady-state evoked potential in 500, 1000, 2000 and 4000 Hz. Descriptive statistic tests and error graphs were also performed to evaluate the trend of the data, t-Student test to determine significant difference for samples related to p < 0.05, confidence intervals for the mean and probabilistic intersection of AꓵB. RESULTS: In most evaluations, the values are inverse with respect to the averages and standard deviations. The highest correlations were found in the frequency of 2000 Hz with TDH39. The probability of greater coincidence between both tests with TDH39 and free field was found in the right ear at the frequency of 500 Hz. CONCLUSIONS: It is necessary to perform the visual reinforcement audiometry in a random way in both ears and evaluated frequencies in order to obtain specific results in the auditory threshold determination, as well as to try to ensure an adequate previous conditioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
12. Lutein and zeaxanthin status and auditory thresholds in a sample of young healthy adults.
- Author
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Wong, Jennifer C., Kaplan, Holly S., and Hammond, Billy R.
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COGNITIVE ability , *LUTEIN , *ZEAXANTHIN , *AUDITORY cortex , *AUDITORY perception , *DIETARY supplements , *PSYCHOPHYSICS - Abstract
Objectives: Dietary carotenoids lutein (L) and zeaxanthin (Z) have been linked to improved visual and cognitive function. These effects are thought to be mediated by the presence of these pigments in critical regions of the retina and brain. There, it has been postulated that L and Z mediate improved performance by enhancing neural efficiency. The auditory system also relies on efficient segregating of signals and noise and LZ are also found in the auditory cortex. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the influence of LZ status (as assessed by the measuring levels in retina) on auditory thresholds in young non-smokers (N = 32,M = 20.72 ± 3.28 years). Design: LZ status was determined by measuring macular pigment (MP) optical density using a standardized psychophysical technique (customized heterochromatic flicker photometry). Auditory thresholds were assessed with puretone thresholds and puretone auditory thresholds in white noise. Results: MP density was related to many, but not all, of the puretone thresholds we tested: 250 Hz (F(6,32) = 4.36,P < 0.01), 500 Hz (F(6,32) = 2.25,P < 0.05), 1000 Hz (F(6,32) = 3.22,P < 0.05), and 6000 Hz (F(6,32) = 2.56,P < 0.05). Conclusion: The overall pattern of results is consistent with a role for L and Z in maintaining optimal auditory function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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13. Comparison of Pure-Tone Thresholds and Cochlear Microphonics Thresholds in Pediatric Cochlear Implant Patients
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Kanthaiah Koka, Sarah Coulthurst, Alison J Nachman, Mike T Murray, and Aniket A. Saoji
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Audiology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hearing ,Cochlear implant ,0103 physical sciences ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Microphonics ,Humans ,Child ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,010301 acoustics ,Auditory thresholds ,Cochlear microphonic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Pure tone ,business.industry ,Auditory Threshold ,Electrocochleography ,Visual reinforcement audiometry ,Cochlear Implantation ,Audiometry, Evoked Response ,Cochlear Implants ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Child, Preschool ,Audiometry, Pure-Tone ,Audiometry ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVES In adult cochlear implant patients, conventional audiometry is used to measure postoperative residual hearing which requires active listening and patient feedback. However, audiological measurements in pediatric cochlear implant patients are both challenging as well as time consuming. Intracochlear electrocochleography (ECOG) offers an objective and a time-efficient method to measure frequency-specific cochlear microphonic or difference thresholds (CM/DIF) thresholds that closely approximate auditory thresholds in adult cochlear implant patients. The correlation between CM/DIF and behavioral thresholds has not been established in pediatric cochlear implant patients. In the present study, CM/DIF thresholds were compared with audiometric thresholds in pediatric cochlear implant patients with postoperative residual hearing. DESIGN Thirteen (11 unilateral and 2 bilateral) pediatric cochlear implant patients (mean age = 9.2 years ± 5.1) participated in this study. Audiometric thresholds were estimated using conventional, condition play, or visual reinforcement audiometry. A warble tone stimulus was used to measure audiometric thresholds at 125, 250, 500, 1000, and 2000 Hz. ECOG waveforms were elicited using 50-msec acoustic tone-bursts. The most apical intracochlear electrode was used as the recording electrode with an extra-cochlear ground electrode. The ECOG waveforms were analyzed to determine CM/DIF thresholds that were compared with pediatric cochlear implant patients' audiometric thresholds. RESULTS The results show a significant correlation (r = 0.77, p < 0.01) between audiometric and CM/DIF thresholds over a frequency range of 125 to 2000 Hz in pediatric cochlear implant patients. Frequency-specific comparisons revealed a correlation of 0.82, 0.74, 0.69, 0.41, and 0.32 between the audiometric thresholds and CM/DIF thresholds measured at 125, 250, 500, 1000, and 2000 Hz, respectively. An average difference of 0.4 dB (±14 dB) was measured between the audiometric and CM/DIF thresholds. CONCLUSIONS Intracochlear ECOG can be used to measure CM/DIF thresholds in pediatric cochlear implant patients with residual hearing in the implanted ear. The CM/DIF thresholds are similar to the audiometric thresholds at lower test frequencies and offer an objective method to monitor residual hearing in difficult-to-test pediatric cochlear implant patients.
- Published
- 2020
14. Estimation of auditory threshold in an extended frequency range in elderly people
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Tatyana Yu. Vladimirova, A. V. Kurenkov, Lubov V. Aizenshtadt, and Anastasia M. Kashapova
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Hearing loss ,business.industry ,Presbycusis ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,Concomitant ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Elderly people ,Sensorineural hearing loss ,Auditory function ,medicine.symptom ,Audiometry ,business ,Auditory thresholds ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Objectives - to study hearing thresholds at high frequencies in elderly and senile patients, taking into account the age norm and the presence of comorbid diseases. Material and methods. 111 patients aged from 50 to 97 years (mean age 70.5 ± 2.1) were examined, their age, auditory function, and concomitant diseases were also registered. Results. The measured average auditory thresholds at high frequencies, if compared to the age-related standards for auditory sensitivity, have revealed an underestimated hearing loss in 12.6% of patients. The presence of concomitant diseases has a significant impact on the development of chronic sensorineural hearing loss in each age group. Conclusion. Audiometry in an extended frequency range in elderly patients with concurrent diseases can improve the hearing examination algorithm.
- Published
- 2019
15. Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials in 2-Year-Old Subjects
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Ayra Renata D'Agostini, Jennifer Alves Sousa, Eliara Pinto Vieira Biaggio, Inaê Costa, and Ana Paula Ramos de Souza
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Auditory perception ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Medicine ,Audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Auditory pathways ,Auditory function ,Evoked potential ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Auditory thresholds ,Original Research ,child ,evoked potential ,Cortical auditory evoked potentials ,maturation ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,lcsh:Otorhinolaryngology ,electrophysiology ,lcsh:RF1-547 ,auditory perception ,Electrophysiology ,Language development ,Otorhinolaryngology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Introduction Cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) can be used to evaluate both peripheral and cortical components of auditory function, and contribute to the assessment of functional sensitivity and auditory thresholds, especially in neonates and infants. Auditory evoked potentials reflect auditory maturity and precede the acquisition of more complex auditory and cognitive skills, and are therefore crucial for speech and language development. Objective The aim of the present study was to determine the presence, latency and amplitude of CAEP components in response to verbal stimuli in children aged 2 years old. Methods The sample consisted of 19 subjects, 10 of whom were male while 9 were female. All of the participants were 24 months old at the time of assessment. Results A total of 17 of the participants displayed all components of the CAEP. Additionally, no significant differences were observed between genders or ears in the present sample. The presence of all components of the CAEP in subjects aged 2 years old confirms the existence of a critical period for the maturation of auditory pathways in the first 2 years of life. Conclusion In the present study, in addition to the P1/N1 components, it was possible to observe the presence of the CAEP P2/N2 components in individuals aged 24 months, confirming the existence of a critical period for the maturation of the auditory pathways in the first 2 years of life.
- Published
- 2019
16. Effect of Environmental Noise, Distance and Warning Sound on Pedestrians’ Auditory Detectability of Electric Vehicles
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Ming-Le Tong, Cheng-Wu Yan, Min-Chih Hsieh, and Hung-Jen Chen
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business.product_category ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Acoustics ,Pedestrian ,Article ,Electricity ,Electric vehicle ,warning sound ,Humans ,Environmental noise ,Sound pressure ,environmental noise ,Auditory thresholds ,Sound (geography) ,electric vehicles ,Pedestrians ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Auditory Threshold ,Sound ,auditory detectability ,Auditory Perception ,Medicine ,Environmental science ,Detection rate ,business ,Noise - Abstract
With developments in science and technology, the number of electric vehicles will increase, and they will even replace ICE vehicles. Thus, perceiving the presence of approaching electric vehicles on the road has become an important issue. In this study, the auditory detectability of the electric vehicle warning sound at different volumes, distances, and environmental noise levels was investigated. To this end, the detection rate was recorded in experiments with three environmental noise levels (50, 60, and 70 dBA), two sound pressure levels (SPLs) of the warning sound (46 and 51 dBA), three frequency combinations of the warning sound (5000, 2500, 1250, and 630 Hz for high frequencies, 2500, 1250, 630, and 315 Hz for medium frequencies, and 1250, 630, 315, and 160 Hz for low frequencies), and five distances (2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 m). The main results showed that the detection rate at 51 dBA was significantly higher than that at 46 dBA under a high-frequency warning sound, however, the detection rates were similar under medium- and low-frequency warning sounds. The participants’ rates of detection for warning sounds were less than 20% under all experimental conditions, and a high-frequency warning sound was not affected by environmental noise. With regard to distances, no significant effects were observed between the distances and the detection rate at any of the three frequencies. In addition, auditory thresholds based on high-, medium-, and low-frequency warning sounds were found through logistic regression analysis results. The results of this study can be used as a reference for the future design of warning sounds.
- Published
- 2021
17. Detection of auditory signals in quiet and noisy backgrounds while performing a visuo-spatial task.
- Author
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Rawool, Vishakha W.
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SIGNAL detection , *TASK performance , *CHATTERING control (Control systems) , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *QUANTITATIVE research , *PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
Context: The ability to detect important auditory signals while performing visual tasks may be further compounded by background chatter. Thus, it is important to know how task performance may interact with background chatter to hinder signal detection.Aim: To examine any interactive effects of speech spectrum noise and task performance on the ability to detect signals.Settings and Design: The setting was a sound-treated booth. A repeated measures design was used.Materials and Methods: Auditory thresholds of 20 normal adults were determined at 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz in the following conditions presented in a random order: (1) quiet with attention; (2) quiet with a visuo-spatial task or puzzle (distraction); (3) noise with attention and (4) noise with task.Statistical Analysis: Multivariate analyses of variance (MANOVA) with three repeated factors (quiet versus noise, visuo-spatial task versus no task, signal frequency).Results: MANOVA revealed significant main effects for noise and signal frequency and significant noise-frequency and task-frequency interactions. Distraction caused by performing the task worsened the thresholds for tones presented at the beginning of the experiment and had no effect on tones presented in the middle. At the end of the experiment, thresholds (4 kHz) were better while performing the task than those obtained without performing the task. These effects were similar across the quiet and noise conditions.Conclusion: Detection of auditory signals is difficult at the beginning of a distracting visuo-spatial task but over time, task learning and auditory training effects can nullify the effect of distraction and may improve detection of high frequency sounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Strain differences in hearing in song canaries
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Robert J. Dooling, Adam R. Fishbein, Elizabeth F. Brittan-Powell, Jane A. Brown, Farrah N. Madison, and Gregory F. Ball
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medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Hearing loss ,Strain (biology) ,Biology ,Audiology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Hair cell ,medicine.symptom ,Auditory thresholds ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Belgian Waterslager song canaries, bred for hundreds of years for a low-pitched song, have also acquired an inherited high-frequency hearing loss associated with hair cell abnormalities. Here, auditory thresholds measured using auditory brainstem responses and psychophysical methods in three different strains of canaries are compared: Belgian Waterslagers, American Singers, and Borders. Border canaries have not been bred for song characteristics while American Singer canaries have been bred for song only since the 1930s. Results show that American Singer canaries also have elevated high frequency thresholds that are similar to those of the Belgian Waterslager, while Border canaries have normal thresholds. These results strengthen the case that song canary breeders in selecting for song characteristics may have inadvertently selected for hearing abnormalities.
- Published
- 2019
19. Brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP) in dairy calves
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Paula González-Blanco, Rafael Cediel-Algovia, Javier Blanco-Murcia, and Michela Re
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medicine.medical_specialty ,General Veterinary ,Adult male ,business.industry ,Audiology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Sound intensity ,Xylazine Hydrochloride ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,sense organs ,Brainstem ,Ear canal ,business ,Auditory thresholds - Abstract
Brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP) are useful to diagnose neurologic and genetic disorders in cattle but normal parameters and its application to detect changes in hearing are not demonstrated. The aims of this study were to develop a protocol for obtaining BAEP in Holstein calves and to establish the normal parameters of peak latencies, interpeak latencies (IPL) and waveforms of BAEP in this species. Ten male Holstein calves, aged 2.5 months and weighting 90.7 ± 4.0 kg were used. All animals were previously sedated with 0.08 mg/kg xylazine hydrochloride administered intramuscularly. The BAEP analysis was recorded using the IHS SmartEP-ASSR program connected with electrode needles placed on the standardized locations of the animal's head. Monoaurally presented broadband click stimuli (0.1 ms) were used for BAEP stimulation, with contralateral masking of 30 dB SPL. Stimuli were presented at a rate of 35.5 pulses per second (PPS) and evoked responses were collected and averaged 450–1500 times for each sound intensity. Earphones were inserted into the ear canal to present the acoustic stimulus and to attenuate environmental noise. Peak latencies, IPL, waveforms and auditory thresholds were recorded and analyzed in the right ear and were like those described in previous papers in adult male bulls. Auditory thresholds obtained in all animals were 33 ± 1.5 dB SPL. Peak latencies were 1.4 ± 0.07 ms (Peak I), 2.4 ± 0.10 ms (Peak II), 3.3 ± 0.10 ms (Peak III), 4.4 ± 0.19 ms (Peak IV) and 5.6 ± 0.28 ms (Peak V). IPL were 1.9 ± 0.12 ms (IPL I-III), 4.1 ± 0.29 ms (IPL I-V), 2.2 ± 0.19 ms (IPL II-V) and 2.2 ± 0.19 ms (IPL III-V). Brainstem auditory evoked potentials are a minimally-invasive method to evaluate level of audition in Holstein calves. In addition, BAEP is a method that can be applied in young calves and it would work on-farm to select the animals with better conditions.
- Published
- 2019
20. Activation of Auditory Centers during Freezing Response Depends on Visual Afferentation in Course of the Development of Pied Flycatcher Nestlings
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Elena Korneeva, Leonid Alexandrov, Tatyana Golubeva, and Anna Tiunova
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ALARM ,Altricial ,comic_books ,Pied flycatcher ,Biological neural network ,Defense behavior ,Flycatcher ,Biology ,Alarm signal ,Neuroscience ,Auditory thresholds ,comic_books.character - Abstract
The study of defense behavior development in pied flycatcher altricial nestlings has shown that preceding visual deprivation decreased the capability to freeze in the young. At the same time, auditory thresholds of deprived nestlings were lower than those of the nestlings developing in unaltered visual environment. Our goal in the present work was to study effects of visual input on the functional development of neural circuitry for flycatcher’s acoustically-guided defensive behavior. We compared the immunohistochemical response of transcription factors ZENK and c-Fos in the nestlings’ auditory telencephalic structures in visually deprived and non-deprived flycatcher nestlings to alarm calls emitted by adult birds. We have demonstrated that the development of flycatcher nestlings under the conditions of limited visual afferentation results in the decrease of induction of the immediate-early genes c-Fos and ZENK in auditory structures of 9-day-old nestlings performing auditory-guided defense behavior. The most marked decrease of induction of both genes is observed in Field L. Our data suggest that visual afferentation affects neuronal activations in higher auditory structures of nestlings’ brain that, in turn, may increase the efficiency of species-typical alarm call. Thus, the work demonstrated for the first time that visual affererntation facilitates the growth of efficiency of alarm call affecting the activity of neurons in auditory integrative structures.
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- 2019
21. Intracochlear Electrocochleography and Speech Perception Scores in Cochlear Implant Recipients
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Shannon M. Lefler, Craig A. Buchman, Carla V. Valenzuela, Kanthaiah Koka, Jeffery T. Lichtenhan, and Amanda J. Ortmann
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tone burst ,Speech perception ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Audiology ,Article ,Electrode insertion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cochlear implant ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Auditory thresholds ,Audiometric testing ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Round window ,business.industry ,Auditory Threshold ,Electrocochleography ,Middle Aged ,Audiometry, Evoked Response ,Electrodes, Implanted ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cochlear Implants ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Round Window, Ear ,Speech Perception ,Audiometry, Pure-Tone ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS Previous studies have demonstrated that electrocochleography (ECochG) measurements made at the round window prior to cochlear implant (CI) electrode insertion can account for 47% of the variability in 6-month speech perception scores. Recent advances have made it possible to use the apical CI electrode to record intracochlear responses to acoustic stimuli. Study objectives were to determine 1) the relationship between intracochlear ECochG response amplitudes and 6-month speech perception scores and 2) to determine the relationship between behavioral auditory thresholds and ECochG threshold estimates. The hypothesis was that intracochlear ECochG response amplitudes made immediately after electrode insertion would be larger than historical controls (at the extracochlear site) and explain more variability in speech perception scores. STUDY DESIGN Prospective case series. METHODS Twenty-two adult CI recipients with varying degrees of low-frequency hearing had intracochlear ECochG measurements made immediately after CI electrode insertion using 110 dB SPL tone bursts. Tone bursts were centered at five octave-spaced frequencies between 125 and 2,000 Hz. RESULTS There was no association between intracochlear ECochG response amplitudes and speech perception scores. But, the data suggest a mild to moderate relationship between preoperative behavioral audiometric testing and intraoperative ECochG threshold estimates. CONCLUSION Performing intracochlear ECochG is highly feasible and results in larger response amplitudes, but performing ECochG before, rather than after, CI insertion may provide a more accurate assessment of a patient's speech perception potential. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE 4 Laryngoscope, 131:E2681-E2688, 2021.
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- 2021
22. Age-related degradation of tectorial membrane dynamics with loss of CEACAM16
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Dennis M. Freeman, Daniel Filizzola, Mary Ann Cheatham, Amer Mansour, Jonathan B. Sellon, and Roozbeh Ghaffari
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Extracellular Matrix Proteins ,Tectorial Membrane ,Chemistry ,Tectorial membrane ,Viscosity ,Biophysics ,Age Factors ,Progressive hearing loss ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Mice ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hearing ,Age related ,medicine ,Animals ,Sensorineural hearing loss ,TECTA ,Hearing Loss ,Auditory thresholds ,Cell Adhesion Molecules - Abstract
Studies of genetic disorders of sensorineural hearing loss have been instrumental in delineating mechanisms that underlie the remarkable sensitivity and selectivity that are hallmarks of mammalian hearing. For example, genetic modifications of TECTA and TECTB, which are principal proteins that comprise the tectorial membrane (TM), have been shown to alter auditory thresholds and frequency tuning in ways that can be understood in terms of changes in the mechanical properties of the TM. Here we investigate effects of genetic modification targeting CEACAM16, a third important TM protein. Loss of CEACAM16 has been recently shown to lead to progressive reductions in sensitivity. While age-related hearing losses have previously been linked to changes in sensory receptor cells, the role of the TM in progressive hearing loss is largely unknown. Here, we show that TM stiffness and viscosity are significantly reduced in adult mice that lack functional CEACAM16 relative to age-matched wild-type controls. By contrast, these same mechanical properties of TMs from juvenile mice that lack functional CEACAM16 are more similar to those of wild-type mice. Thus changes in hearing phenotype align with changes in TM material properties and can be understood in terms of the same TM wave properties that were previously used to characterize modifications of TECTA and TECTB. These results demonstrate that CEACAM16 is essential for maintaining TM mechanical and wave properties, which in turn, are necessary for sustaining the remarkable sensitivity and selectivity of mammalian hearing with increasing age.
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- 2021
23. Hörschwellen bei zivilen Piloten und Beschäftigten im Baugewerbe.
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Müller, R. and Schneider, J.
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Copyright of Zentralblatt fuer Arbeitsmedizin, Arbeitsschutz und Ergonomie is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2015
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24. Are auditory steady-state responses a good tool prior to pediatric cochlear implantation?
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Beck, Roberto Miquelino de Oliveira, Grasel, Signe Schuster, Ramos, Henrique Faria, Almeida, Edigar Rezende de, Tsuji, Robinson Koji, Bento, Ricardo Ferreira, and Brito, Rubens de
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PEDIATRIC ophthalmology , *COCHLEAR implants , *DEAFNESS , *AUDITORY perception , *BEHAVIORAL assessment , *AIR conditioning - Abstract
Introduction ASSR allow frequency-specific evaluation in intensities up to 120 dB HL and detection of residual hearing in patients with severe-to-profound hearing loss. Aim to compare ASSR thresholds and behavioral test results in children with suspected severe-to-profound hearing loss. Methods Cross sectional study to compare ASSR and behavioral responses (VRA or audiometry) in 63 pediatric cochlear implant candidates (126 ears) aged between 6 and 72 months. We included children with normal otomicroscopy, absent responses to click-ABR and otoaccoustic emissions. We excluded children with inner ear malformations, auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder or who did not complete VRA or achieve EEG noise < 30 nV during the ASSR test. Air-conduction ASSR stimuli were continuous sinusoidal tones presented at 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz starting at 110 dB HL. Behavioral thresholds were acquired with warble tones presented at 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz in each ear through insert or head phones at maximum presentation level of 120 dB HL. Results Behavioral thresholds were obtained in 36.7% (185/504) of all frequencies in all subjects, 9% in intensities >110 dB HL. Among 504 ASSR measurements, 53 thresholds were obtained (10.5%). Overall 89.5% of the tested frequencies did not show any response at 110 dB HL. Most responses were at 500 Hz. Mean differences between behavioral and ASSR thresholds varied from 0.09 to 8.94 dB. Twenty-seven comparisons of behavioral and ASSR thresholds were obtained: 12 at 0.5 kHz, 9 at 1 kHz, 5 at 2 kHz and 1 at 4 kHz. Absent responses were observed in both tests in 38.1% at 0.5 kHz, 52.4% at 1 kHz, 74.6% at 2 kHz and 81.0% at 4 kHz. Specificity was > 90% at 1, 2 and 4 kHz. In ears with no behavioral response at 120 dB HL all ASSR thresholds were in the profound hearing loss range, 90% of them were ≥110 dB HL. Conclusion Among 63 pediatric CI candidates, absent responses to high-intensity ASSR was the major finding (specificity > 90%) predicting behavioral thresholds in the profound hearing loss range. These findings can be helpful to confirm the decision for cochlear implantation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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25. Evaluation of residual hearing in cochlear implants candidates using auditory steady-state response.
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Ramos, Henrique Faria, Grasel, Signe Schuster, Beck, Roberto Miquelino de Oliveira, Takahashi-Ramos, Marystella Tomoe, Ramos, Bernardo Faria, de Almeida, Edigar Resende, Bento, Ricardo Ferreira, and Brito Neto, Rubens de
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TREATMENT of deafness , *AUDIOMETRY , *AUDITORY evoked response , *AUDITORY perception testing , *COCHLEAR implants , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *STATISTICAL correlation , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY , *ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY , *HEARING , *T-test (Statistics) , *PREDICTIVE tests , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
Conclusion: The correlations between behavioral and auditory steady-state response (ASSR) thresholds were significant at 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz. ASSR presented high sensitivity and specificity in the detection of residual hearing in cochlear implant candidates when compared with warble-tone audiometry. Objectives: To assess residual hearing in cochlear implant candidates by comparing the electrophysiological thresholds obtained in dichotic single-frequency ASSR with behavioral thresholds at 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz. Methods: This was a comparative study between ASSR and warble-tone audiometry thresholds in 40 cochlear implant candidates (80 ears) before cochlear implantation with bilateral severe-to-profound sensorineural hearing loss. Results: Thresholds were obtained in 62.5% of all frequencies evaluated in warble-tone audiometry and in 63.1% in the ASSR. ASSR sensitivity was 96% and specificity was 91.6%. Mean differences between behavioral and ASSR thresholds did not reach significance at any frequencies. Strong correlations between behavioral and ASSR thresholds were observed in 500, 1000, and 2000 Hz and moderate in 4000 Hz, with correlation coefficients varying from 0.65 to 0.81. On 90% of occasions, ASSR thresholds were acquired within 10 dB of behavioral thresholds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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26. Hearing and Age-Related Changes in the Gray Mouse Lemur.
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Schopf, Christian, Zimmermann, Elke, Tünsmeyer, Julia, Kästner, Sabine, Hubka, Peter, and Kral, Andrej
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In order to examine auditory thresholds and hearing sensitivity during aging in the gray mouse lemur ( Microcebus murinus), suggested to represent a model for early primate evolution and Alzheimer research, we applied brainstem-evoked response audiometry (BERA), traditionally used for screening hearing sensitivity in human babies. To assess the effect of age, we determined auditory thresholds in two age groups of adult mouse lemurs (young adults, 1-5 years; old adults, ≥7 years) using clicks and tone pips. Auditory thresholds indicated frequency sensitivity from 800 Hz to almost 50 kHz, covering the species tonal communication range with fundamentals from about 8 to 40 kHz. The frequency of best hearing at 7.9 kHz was slightly lower than that and coincided with the dominant frequencies of communication signals of a predator. Aging shifted auditory thresholds in the range between 2 and 50.4 kHz significantly by 12-27 dB. This mild presbyacusis, expressed in a drop of amplitudes of BERA signals, but not discernible in latencies of responses, suggests a metabolic age-related decrease potentially combined with an accompanying degeneration of the cochlear nerve. Our findings on hearing range of this species support the hypothesis that predation was a driving factor for the evolution of hearing in small ancestral primates. Likewise, results provide the empirical basis for future approaches trying to differentiate peripheral from central factors when studying Alzheimer's disease-like pathologies in the aging brain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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27. Infant Auditory Sensitivity to Pure Tones and Frequency-Modulated Tones
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Lori J. Leibold and Lynne A. Werner
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Auditory perception ,Range (music) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Communication ,Pure tone ,business.industry ,Fundamental frequency ,Audiology ,Noise ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Psychology ,business ,Sensitivity (electronics) ,Frequency modulation ,Auditory thresholds - Abstract
It has been suggested that infants respond preferentially to infant-directed speech because their auditory sensitivity to sounds with extensive frequency modulation (FM) is better than their sensitivity to less modulated sounds. In this experiment, auditory thresholds for FM tones and for unmodulated, or pure, tones in a background of noise were measured for 4-month-old infants using a conditioned response procedure. The FM tones swept from 150 to 275 Hz or from 150 to 550 Hz. The frequency of the pure tone was either 275 or 550 Hz. The results showed that infants were slightly, but significantly, more sensitive to the sounds that included 550 Hz than they were to the lower frequency sounds, whether or not the sound was frequency modulated. It appears that infants could be somewhat more sensitive to infant-directed than to adult-directed speech, not because of FM per se, but because the fundamental frequency excursions in infant-directed speech extend into a higher frequency range than those in adult-directed speech.
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- 2021
28. Modulation rate and age effect on intermittent speech recognition
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Rayane Ferreira da Silva, Karina Paes Advíncula, Priscila Aliança Gonçalves, Gabrielle Araújo Leite, Liliane Desgualdo Pereira, Silvana Maria Sobral Griz, and Denise Costa Menezes
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Age effect ,Speech perception ,Speech recognition ,P1-1091 ,01 natural sciences ,Percepção da Fala ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Audição ,Hearing ,Teste de Discriminação de Fala ,0103 physical sciences ,Modulation (music) ,Linear regression ,Post-hoc analysis ,Medicine ,Speech ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Philology. Linguistics ,010301 acoustics ,Auditory thresholds ,General Environmental Science ,Aged ,business.industry ,Idoso ,Significant difference ,Fala ,General Medicine ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 ,Speech Discrimination Tests ,Speech Perception ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Analysis of variance ,business - Abstract
Purpose: to investigate the auditory recognition of intermittent speech in relation to different modulation rates and ages. Methods: 20 young people, 20 middle-aged adults, and 16 older adults, all of them with auditory thresholds equal to or lower than 25 dB HL up to the frequency of 4000 Hz. The participants were submitted to intermittent speech recognition tests presented in three modulation conditions: 4 Hz, 10 Hz, and 64 Hz. The percentages of correct answers were compared between age groups and modulation rates. ANOVA and post hoc tests were conducted to investigate the modulation rate effect, and the mixed linear regression model (p < 0.001). Results: regarding the age effect, the data showed a significant difference between young people and older adults, and between middle-aged and older adults. As for the modulation rate effect, the indexes of correct answers were significantly lower at the slower rate (4 Hz) in the three age groups. Conclusion: an age effect was verified on intermittent speech recognition: older adults have greater difficulty. A modulation rate effect was also noticed in the three age groups: the higher the rate, the better the performance. RESUMO Objetivo: investigar o reconhecimento auditivo da fala intermitente em função de diferentes taxas de modulação e em função da idade. Métodos: participaram do estudo vinte jovens, vinte adultos de meia idade, e dezesseis idosos, todos com limiares auditivos iguais ou menores que 25 dB NA até a frequência de 4000 Hz. Os participantes foram submetidos a testes de reconhecimento da fala intermitente apresentada em três condições de modulação: 4 Hz, 10 Hz e 64 Hz. Percentuais de acerto foram comparados entre grupos etários e taxas de modulação. Para a investigação do efeito da taxa de modulação foi realizada ANOVA e testes Post Hoc, enquanto para a investigação do efeito da idade, utilizou-se o modelo de regressão linear misto (p
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- 2021
29. Validity of hearTest Smartphone-Based Audiometry for Hearing Screening in Workers Exposed to Noise
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Luma Cordeiro Rodrigues, Silvia Ferrite, and Ana Paula Corona
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hearing loss ,Youden's J statistic ,Audiology ,Hearing screening ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Audiometry ,Hearing ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Auditory thresholds ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Auditory Threshold ,Confidence interval ,Noise ,Hearing level ,Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced ,Audiometry, Pure-Tone ,Smartphone ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Purpose This article investigates the validity of a smartphone-based audiometry for hearing screening to identify hearing loss in workers exposed to noise. Research Design This is a validation study comparing hearing screening with the hearTest to conventional audiometry. The study population included all workers who attended the Brazilian Social Service of Industry to undergo periodic examinations. Sensitivity, specificity, the Youden index, and positive (PPV) and negative predictive values (NPV) for hearing screening obtained by the hearTest were estimated according to three definitions of hearing loss: any threshold greater than 25 dB hearing level (HL), the mean auditory thresholds for 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz greater than 25 dB HL, and the mean thresholds for 3, 4, and 6 kHz greater than 25 dB HL. Note that 95% confidence intervals were calculated for all measurements. Results A total of 232 workers participated in the study. Hearing screening with the hearTest presented good sensitivity (93.8%), specificity (83.9%), and Youden index (77.7%) values, a NPV (97.2%), and a low PPV (69.0%) for the identification of hearing loss defined as any auditory threshold greater than 25 dB HL. For the other definitions of hearing loss, we observed high specificity, PPV and NPV, as well as low sensitivity and Youden index. Conclusion The hearTest is an accurate hearing screening tool to identify hearing loss in workers exposed to noise, including those with noise-induced hearing loss, although it does not replace conventional audiometry.
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- 2020
30. Cortical Neurophysiologic Correlates of Auditory Threshold in Adults and Children With Normal Hearing and Auditory Neuropathy Spectrum Disorder
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Garrett Cardon and Anu Sharma
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hearing Loss, Sensorineural ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder ,Hearing ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Humans ,Threshold estimation ,Hearing Loss, Central ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Child ,Auditory thresholds ,Research Articles ,Cortical auditory evoked potentials ,business.industry ,Auditory Threshold ,medicine.disease ,Auditory brainstem response ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Sensorineural hearing loss ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose Auditory threshold estimation using the auditory brainstem response or auditory steady state response is limited in some populations (e.g., individuals with auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder [ANSD] or those who have difficulty remaining still during testing and cannot tolerate general anesthetic). However, cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) can be recorded in many such patients and have been employed in threshold approximation. Thus, we studied CAEP estimates of auditory thresholds in participants with normal hearing, sensorineural hearing loss, and ANSD. Method We recorded CAEPs at varying intensity levels to speech (i.e., /ba/) and tones (i.e., 1 kHz) to estimate auditory thresholds in normal-hearing adults ( n = 10) and children ( n = 10) and case studies of children with sensorineural hearing loss and ANSD. Results Results showed a pattern of CAEP amplitude decrease and latency increase as stimulus intensities declined until waveform components disappeared near auditory threshold levels. Overall, CAEP thresholds were within 10 dB HL of behavioral thresholds for both stimuli. Conclusions The above findings suggest that CAEPs may be clinically useful in estimating auditory threshold in populations for whom such a method does not currently exist. Physiologic threshold estimation in difficult-to-test clinical populations could lead to earlier intervention and improved outcomes.
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- 2020
31. Manipulation of BK channel expression is sufficient to alter auditory hair cell thresholds in larval zebrafish.
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Rohmann, Kevin N., Tripp, Joel A., Genova, Rachel M., and Bass, Andrew H.
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ZEBRA danio , *POTASSIUM channels , *HEARING , *FISH physiology , *GENE expression - Abstract
Non-mammalian vertebrates rely on electrical resonance for frequency tuning in auditory hair cells. A key component of the resonance exhibited by these cells is an outward calcium-activated potassium current that flows through large-conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channels. Previous work in midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) has shown that BK expression correlates with seasonal changes in hearing sensitivity and that pharmacologically blocking these channels replicates the natural decreases in sensitivity during the winter non-reproductive season. To test the hypothesis that reducing BK channel function is sufficient to change auditory thresholds in fish, morpholino oligonucleotides (MOs) were used in larval zebrafish (Danio rerio) to alter expression of slola and slolb, duplicate genes coding for the pore-forming a-subunits of BK channels. Following MO injection, microphonic potentials were recorded from the inner ear of larvae. Quantitative real-time PCR was then used to determine the MO effect on slola and slolb expression in these same fish. Knockdown of either slola or slolb resulted in disrupted gene expression and increased auditory thresholds across the same range of frequencies of natural auditory plasticity observed in midshipman. We conclude that interference with the normal expression of individual slol genes is sufficient to increase auditory thresholds in zebrafish larvae and that changes in BK channel expression are a direct mechanism for regulation of peripheral hearing sensitivity among fishes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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32. Ample active acoustic space of a frog from the South American temperate forest.
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Penna, Mario and Moreno-Gómez, Felipe
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FORESTS & forestry , *SOUND production by amphibians , *AMPHIBIAN communication , *NOISE (Work environment) , *FROGS , *ACOUSTIC wave propagation - Abstract
The efficiency of acoustic communication depends on the power generated by the sound source, the attributes of the environment across which signals propagate, the environmental noise and the sensitivity of the intended receivers. Eupsophus emiliopugini, an anuran from the temperate austral forest communicates by means of an advertisement call of moderate intensity within the range for anurans. To estimate the range over which these frogs communicate effectively, we conducted measurements of call sound levels and of auditory thresholds to pure tones and to synthetic conspecific calls. The results show that E. emiliopugini produces advertisement calls of about 84 dB SPL at 0.25 m from the caller. The signals are affected by attenuation as they propagate, reaching average values of about 47 dB SPL at 8 m from the sound source. Midbrain multi-unit recordings show quite sensitive audiograms within the anuran range, with thresholds of about 44 dB SPL for synthetic imitations of conspecific calls, which would allow communication at distances beyond 8 m. This is an extended range as compared to E. calcaratus, a related syntopic species for which a previous study has shown to be restricted to active acoustic spaces shorter than 2 m. The comparison reveals divergent strategies for related taxa communicating amid the same environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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33. Of Silent Sirens and Pied Pipers
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Bruyninckx, Joeri, Tkaczyk, Viktoria, Mills, Mara, Hui, Alexandra, Technology & Society Studies, and RS: FASoS MUSTS
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medicine.medical_specialty ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Audiology ,Psychology ,Auditory thresholds - Abstract
Animal hearing has long served as a model for understanding human hearing. Yet conversely, animal hearing can only be imagined through human hearing. This chapter shows how, building on techniques for testing human hearing, experimental psychologists in the 1930s and 1940s turned to determining the absolute (upper) frequencies of hearing for various other mammal subjects. Showing the domains of animal auditory perception to be overlapping but rarely congruous with that of humans, these measurements began to lead lives of their own in the subsequent decades. Propelled by various scientific, military, and commercial interests, fascination with the ultrasonic stirred imaginaries of sonic control. The threshold of hearing, this chapter argues, is also a threshold to the imagination, as expressed in the simultaneous success and failure of mundane technologies such as the “Ultrasonic Pied Piper” or the “Bird-E-Vict.”
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- 2020
34. Derivation of input-output functions from distortion-product otoacoustic emission level maps
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Anthony W. Gummer, Dennis Zelle, Linda Dierkes, Katharina Bader, and Ernst Dalhoff
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0301 basic medicine ,Input/output ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Distortion product ,Mathematical analysis ,Otoacoustic Emissions, Spontaneous ,Otoacoustic emission ,Auditory Threshold ,Cochlea ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Amplitude ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Objective evaluation ,Auditory thresholds ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Algorithms ,Mathematics - Abstract
Distortion-product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) emerge from the cochlea when elicited with two tones of frequencies f1 and f2. DPOAEs mainly consist of two components, a nonlinear-distortion and a coherent-reflection component. Input-output (I/O) functions of DPOAE pressure at the cubic difference frequency, f DP = 2 f 1 − f 2, enable the computation of estimated distortion-product thresholds (EDPTs), offering a noninvasive approach to estimate auditory thresholds. However, wave interference between the DPOAE components and suboptimal stimulus-level pairs reduces the accuracy of EDPTs. Here, the amplitude P of the nonlinear-distortion component is extracted from short-pulse DPOAE time signals. DPOAE level maps representing the growth behavior of P in L 1 , L 2 space are recorded for 21 stimulus-level pairs and 14 frequencies with f 2 = 1 to 14 kHz ( f 2 / f 1 = 1.2) from 20 ears. Reproducing DPOAE growth behavior using a least-squares fit approach enables the derivation of ridge-based I/O functions from model level maps. Objective evaluation criteria assess the fit results and provide EDPTs, which correlate significantly with auditory thresholds (p
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- 2020
35. Auditory Gating in Hearing Loss
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Alison LaBrec, Mashhood Nielsen, Connor Bean, and Julia Campbell
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Adult ,Independent group ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hearing loss ,Gating ,Electroencephalography ,Audiology ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,03 medical and health sciences ,Speech and Hearing ,0302 clinical medicine ,Auditory gating ,Medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,Hearing Loss, High-Frequency ,Auditory thresholds ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Mean age ,Auditory Threshold ,Middle Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Sensory gating is a measure used to evaluate inhibitory deficits underlying neurological disorders. However, the effects of hearing loss (HL), thought to decrease inhibition, remain unknown on gating function. Purpose The goal of this study was to investigate gating performance in HL. Research Design This was a prospective, cross-sectional study with independent group comparison and correlational design. Study Sample Eleven adults (mean age/standard deviation = 47.546 ± 7.967 years) with normal hearing (NH) and 11 adults (mean age/standard deviation = 56.273 ± 13.871 years) with mild–moderate high-frequency HL. Data Collection and Analysis Cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) were recorded in response to tonal pairs via high-density electroencephalography. The CAEP response to the second tone in the pair (S2) was compared with the response to the first tone in the pair (S1) within groups. Amplitude gating indices were compared between groups and correlated with auditory behavioral measures. Current density reconstructions were performed to estimate cortical gating generators. Results Amplitude gating indices were decreased and correlated with elevated auditory thresholds. Gating generators in temporal, frontal, and prefrontal regions were localized in the NH group, while HL gating was localized in mainly temporal and parietal areas. Conclusions Reduced inhibition may be associated with compensatory cortical gating networks in HL and should be considered when utilizing gating in clinical populations.
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- 2020
36. Noise exposure and effects on hearing in Brazilian fishermen
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Jair Mendes Marques, Cláudia Giglio de Oliveira Gonçalves, Bianca Simone Zeigelboim, Adriana Bender Moreira de Lacerda, and Evelyn Joice Albizu
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Hearing loss ,Fishing ,Fisheries ,Audiology ,Commercial fishing ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Noise exposure ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Auditory thresholds ,Aged ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Noise ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced ,Noise, Occupational ,Length of service ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Tinnitus ,Brazil - Abstract
BACKGROUND Several health conditions among professional fishermen have been reported. Among the risks to the health of fishermen, it should be noted that high noise levels cause hearing loss and general health problems. OBJECTIVE to investigate the effects of exposure to occupational noise on hearing in professional fishermen at the main large-scale commercial fishing center in Brazil. METHODS A cross-sectional study, 466 Brazilian commercial fishermen participated in the study, all males, ages range 18-67 years. A total of 15 vessels were included in the study. The first phase involved assessment of the sound pressure levels (SPLs) in the vessels, the second phase involved the use of a questionnaire and audiological assessment. RESULTS Most compartments registered SPLs greater than 80 dBA and the noisiest compartment was the engine-room, where the vessel pilot works. Among the fishermen, tinnitus was the most commonly reported symptom (48.63%). A higher prevalence of hearing loss was observed in engine-room keepers. Longer the length of time in service, and consequently, exposure to noise (in years), were associated with higher auditory thresholds. CONCLUSION the tolerance limits to noise exposure were exceeded according to legislation. Fishing activities are associated with noise-induced hearing loss, with the risk increasing with the length of service.
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- 2020
37. Hallazgos neurofisiológicos de potenciales evocados auditivos en lactantes con antecedente de prematuridad
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Juan Antonio Giménez-Scherer, María Inés Fraire-Martínez, Sabino Suárez-Hortiales, and Ricardo Hidalgo-Gutiérrez
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hearing loss ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Audiology ,Neurophysiology ,Functional development ,Corrected Age ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,Brainstem ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Auditory thresholds ,Normal range - Abstract
Background Auditory evoked potentials (AEPS) constitutes the most commonly used neurophysiological test to assess the functional development of the auditory brainstem in infants and allows the evaluation of hearing for high frequencies. Methods An observational, descriptive, cross-sectional and retrospective study was conducted. The AEPS results for 186 infants (372 ears) with a history of prematurity were examined. The bioelectrical response, morphology, amplitude, latencies I, III and V, and intervals I-III, III-V and I-V were compared, as well as auditory thresholds between two groups of premature infants Results The bioelectrical response, latencies I, III and V, and intervals I-III and III-V were similar between the two groups of premature infants according to their corrected age; no statistically significant differences were found (p > 0.05) for these variables. The amplitude, morphology, and the I-V interval were more affected in the group of premature infants Conclusions The functional development of the auditory brainstem was similar between the groups of premature infants and within the normal range for the respective corrected age. Prematurity produced a directly proportional and statistically significant increase in the frequency of hearing loss for high frequencies.
- Published
- 2020
38. A case report of absent auditory steady-state responses in an elderly person with moderate sensorineural hearing loss
- Author
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Sadegh Jafarzadeh
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Sensorineural hearing loss ,aging ,auditory steady-state response ,Steady state (electronics) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Pure tone ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,lcsh:Surgery ,lcsh:Medicine ,lcsh:RD1-811 ,General Medicine ,Audiology ,Tympanometry ,medicine.disease ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Speech audiometry ,Acoustic reflex ,business ,Auditory thresholds - Abstract
Background: Auditory steady-state response (ASSR) is a test for the estimation of auditory thresholds. It is used in infants, children, and adults. This case report presented unusual ASSR results in an elderly person. The Case: Pure tone and speech audiometry, tympanometry and acoustic reflexes showed a moderate sensorineural hearing loss in both ears. However, the patient did not respond in the ASSR test to different carrier frequencies with frequency modulations of 40 and 80 Hz. Conclusion: To date, the results of the different effects of the aging process obtained from ASSR responses have been reported. However, the absence of any response in the ASSR test has never been reported. The patient in this case report may have these results because of a neural deficit. Keywords: Sensorineural hearing loss; aging; auditory steady-state response
- Published
- 2020
39. Congenital cytomegalovirus infection and audiological follow-up: electrophysiological auditory threshold before 3 months of age as a predictor of hearing outcome at 3 years of age
- Author
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M. Sorrenti, P. Consolino, M. G. Vergnano, D. Di Lisi, G. Marengo, E. Bertino, A. Leone, Chiara Peila, Alessandra Coscia, Elena Spada, and Francesco Cresi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hearing Loss, Sensorineural ,Population ,Congenital cytomegalovirus infection ,Audiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hearing ,030225 pediatrics ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,education ,Auditory thresholds ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Infant ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Auditory Threshold ,medicine.disease ,Child, Preschool ,Cytomegalovirus Infections ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,business - Abstract
We aimed to evaluate whether electrophysiological auditory thresholds (EATs) before 3 month of age, as assessed by the auditory brainstem responses (ABR) test and the auditory steady state responses (ASSR) test, can predict hearing outcome at 3 years of age among children born with congenital cytomegalovirus (cCMV) infection. Audiological assessment was performed before 3 months of age, and every 6 months thereafter until 3 years of age, in a population of 63 children (126 ears). EATs before 3 months of age and at 3 years of age were compared. No ear with an EAT of ≤30 dBHL (i.e. normal hearing) before 3 months of age showed worsening EATs at 3 years of age. An EAT of ≤30 dBHL obtained by ABR and ASSR tests before 3 months of age is predictive of a normal hearing at 3 years of age in children born with cCMV.
- Published
- 2020
40. Perfil audiológico de profissionais disc jockeys
- Author
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Gabriela Guenther Ribeiro Novanta, Roseany Alves da Costa, Darlene Cardoso de Souza, and Dannyelly Torres Araújo
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Distortion product ,Perda Auditiva Provocada por Ruído ,P1-1091 ,Audiology ,Noise exposure ,Audição ,Hearing ,Statistical significance ,medicine ,Noise-Induced Hearing Loss ,Auditory thresholds ,Philology. Linguistics ,Occupational Noise ,General Environmental Science ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Tympanometry ,medicine.disease ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Ruído Ocupacional ,Audiometry ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Noise-induced hearing loss ,Tinnitus - Abstract
Purpose: to describe the audiological profile of professional disc jockeys acting in cities of the Brazilian Federal District. Methods: audiometry, tympanometry, transient evoked emissions, and distortion product evoked emissions exams were conducted, as well as interviews, in order to identify auditory symptoms. Appropriate statistical tests were applied, adopting a significance level lower than 0.05. Results: a total of 21 disc jockeys, aged between 20 and 45 years, were evaluated. The most cited auditory complaints were feeling of ear fullness (86%) and tinnitus (57%). Auditory thresholds remained predominantly within normal range (90%), but thresholds were increased in frequencies from 3 KHz to 6 KHz (38%). Only 42% of the sample presented a pass response in transient evoked emissions, and 81% in distortion product evoked emissions, in both ears. Conclusion: the research identified auditory thresholds predominantly within standards of normality, though with increased high frequencies, that may be associated with noise exposure. The otoacoustic emissions presented alterations both in the transient ones and in the distortion product. RESUMO Objetivo: descrever o perfil audiológico de profissionais disc jockeys atuantes em cidades do Distrito Federal. Métodos: foram realizados os exames de audiometria, timpanometria, emissões evocadas por estímulo transiente e emissões evocadas - produto de distorção, e entrevista para identificar sintomas auditivos. Foram aplicados os testes estatísticos pertinentes adotando o nível de significância menor que 0,05. Resultados: foram avaliados 21 disc jockeys com faixa etária entre 20 e 45 anos. As queixas auditivas mais citadas foram sensação de plenitude auricular (86%) e zumbido (57%). Os limiares auditivos mantiveram-se predominantemente dentro da normalidade (90%), mas houve aumento dos limiares nas frequências de 3.000 a 6.000 Hz (38%). Apenas 42% da amostra apresentaram resposta “passa” nas emissões evocadas por estímulo transiente e 81% nas emissões evocadas - produto de distorção em ambas as orelhas. Conclusão: a pesquisa identificou limiares auditivos predominantemente dentro dos padrões de normalidade, entretanto com aumento das frequências altas, que podem estar associadas à exposição ao ruído. As emissões otoacústicas apresentaram alterações tanto nas transientes quanto nas por produto de distorção.
- Published
- 2020
41. Auditory-vocal coupling in the naked mole-rat, a mammal with poor auditory thresholds
- Author
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Thomas J. Park, Robert J. Dooling, Daniel T. Applegate, Shigeto Yosida, Catherine M. Barone, Kazuo Okanoya, and Elizabeth F. Brittan-Powell
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sound Spectrography ,Vocal communication ,Physiology ,Biology ,Audiology ,Alarm signal ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,0103 physical sciences ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animals ,Auditory threshold ,Social Behavior ,010301 acoustics ,Auditory thresholds ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Naked mole-rat ,Original Paper ,Mole Rats ,Signature call ,Auditory brainstem response ,Acoustics ,Audiogram ,biology.organism_classification ,Coupling (electronics) ,Auditory Perception ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Mammal ,Vocalization, Animal ,Alarm call ,Gerbillinae ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Brain Stem - Abstract
Naked mole-rats are extremely social and extremely vocal rodents, displaying a wide range of functionally distinct call types and vocalizing almost continuously. Their vocalizations are low frequency, and a behavioral audiogram has shown that naked mole-rats, like other subterranean mammals, hear only low frequencies. Hence, the frequency range of their hearing and vocalizations appears to be well matched. However, even at low frequencies, naked mole-rats show very poor auditory thresholds, suggesting vocal communication may be effective only over short distances. However, in a tunnel environment where low frequency sounds propagate well and background noise is low, it may be that vocalizations travel considerable distances at suprathreshold intensities. Here, we confirmed hearing sensitivity using the auditory brainstem response; we characterized signature and alarm calls in intensity and frequency domains and we measured the effects of propagation through tubes with the diameter of naked mole-rat tunnels. Signature calls-used for intimate communication-could travel 3-8 m at suprathreshold intensities, and alarm calls (lower frequency and higher intensity), could travel up to 15 m. Despite this species' poor hearing sensitivity, the naked mole-rat displays a functional, coupled auditory-vocal communication system-a hallmark principle of acoustic communication systems across taxa.
- Published
- 2018
42. AUDITORY BRAINSTEM IMPLANTATION – REHABILITATIVE METHOD FOR PATIENTS WITH DEAFNESS
- Author
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Yu. К. Yanov, V. E. Kuzovkov, I. V. Koroleva, S. V. Levin, Z. Z. Alugishvili, S. B. Sugarova, and A. S. Lilenko
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Vocabulary ,Rehabilitation ,RD1-811 ,business.industry ,pontocerebellar angle ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,General Medicine ,Aplasia ,Audiology ,medicine.disease ,brainstem implantation ,deafness ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Neurofibromatosis ,business ,Auditory thresholds ,auditory-speech rehabilitation ,Cochlea ,media_common - Abstract
OBJECTIVE. Inventing of the system of auditory brainstem implantation. MATERIAL AND METHODS. 3 patients were chosen for study: 2 adults with neurofibromatosis of type II and a 2 years old child with bilateral cochlea aplasia. RESULTS. In the end of the first rehabilitation, the auditory thresholds accounted 45–50 dB. In 2 years after surgery, the adults differentiate words from the closed set. Passive vocabulary of the child amounted for 200 words. Speech intelligibility was 30–70 % in these patients. CONCLUSION. Wearing of auditory processor for five months led to significant dynamics.
- Published
- 2018
43. Impairment of extra-high frequency auditory thresholds in subjects with elevated levels of fasting blood glucose
- Author
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Nobutaka Ohgami, Masashi Kato, Anwarul A. Akhand, Nazmul Ahsan, Anindya Das, and Ahmed Faisal Sumit
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Audiology ,Extra-high frequency ,Hearing impairment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Age groups ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Binary logistic regression analysis ,030212 general & internal medicine ,030223 otorhinolaryngology ,education ,Auditory thresholds ,Decibel ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Conclusive evidence ,Control subjects ,lcsh:Otorhinolaryngology ,lcsh:RF1-547 ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Fasting blood glucose ,business - Abstract
This study was performed to assess whether there is an association between elevated Fasting Blood Glucose (FBG) and hearing impairment in Bangladeshi population. A total of 142 subjects (72 with elevated FBG; 70 control) were included in the study. The mean auditory thresholds of the control subjects at 1, 4, 8 and 12 kHz frequencies were 6.35 ± 0.35, 10.07 ± 0.91, 27.57 ± 1.82, 51.28 ± 3.01 dB SPL (decibel sound pressure level), respectively and that of the subjects with elevated FBG were 8.33 ± 0.66, 14.37 ± 1.14, 38.96 ± 2.23, and 71.11 ± 2.96 dB, respectively. The auditory thresholds of the subjects with elevated FBG were significantly (p 10 years) showed significantly (p 40 years) and younger (≤40 years) age groups compared to the respective controls. The binary logistic regression analysis showed a 5.79-fold increase in the odds of extra-high frequency hearing impairment in diabetic subjects after adjustment for age, gender and BMI. This study provides conclusive evidence that auditory threshold at an extra-high frequency could be a sensitive marker for hearing impairment in diabetic subjects.
- Published
- 2018
44. Do Body Wall Vibrations Over the Lungs Aid Aerial Hearing in Salamanders? An Investigation into Extratympanic Hearing Mechanisms
- Author
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Jeffrey N. Zeyl and Carol E. Johnston
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Cavity resonance ,Pectoral girdle ,Vibration detection ,Anatomy ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Ambystoma talpoideum ,Notophthalmus viridescens ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Inner ear ,Auditory thresholds ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Caudata - Abstract
Tympanic middle ears are key innovations in the evolution of terrestrial hearing. These structures facilitate sound transmission between air and the inner ear, across an impedance mismatch boundary. Nontympanic taxa present an opportunity to explore extratympanic hearing mechanisms, which could inform our understanding of terrestrial hearing evolution. Salamanders are useful models in this regard because they lack tympanic middle ears. Lung-based extratympanic auditory mechanisms have been demonstrated in earless anurans and are hypothesized to apply to salamanders, based on observations that the body walls overlying the lungs vibrate in response to airborne sound. We tested the hypothesis that body wall vibrations over the lungs aid aerial hearing in salamanders. We immersed the body walls and pectoral girdle below a water surface in two lunged species, Notophthalmus viridescens and Ambystoma talpoideum, predicting that this would elevate auditory thresholds (measured using evoked potentials) by...
- Published
- 2017
45. Development of an auditory fitness-for-duty standard that predicts performance in military hearing tasks from auditory thresholds and performance on the 80-word modified rhyme test
- Author
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Benjamin Sheffield, Hector Galloza, Matthew J. Makashay, and Douglas S. Brungart
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Rhyme ,Computer science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMS ,Audiology ,Variety (linguistics) ,Masking (Electronic Health Record) ,Test (assessment) ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,medicine ,Active listening ,Auditory thresholds ,Binaural recording ,Word (computer architecture) ,media_common - Abstract
Military operations often require Service Members (SMs) to make life-and-death decisions based on information they can only obtain auditorily. However, the wide variety of critical sounds, essential spoken messages, and masking environments encountered while performing military missions makes it difficult to use clinical tests to predict the operational performance of hearing-impaired SMs. In this study, ≈2400 SMs performed listening tasks derived from binaural recordings made during realistic battlefield exercises at the US Army Joint Readiness Training Center. The listening tasks included standardized speech recognition tasks based on the Oldenburg Matrix Test and Modified Rhyme Test (MRT), as well as scenario-based multiple-choice tasks where questions were asked about unmodified verbal exchanges that occurred between SMs engaged in the battlefield simulation. The scores SMs achieved on these operational tasks were then compared to their hearing thresholds and to their scores on the MRT80. The results show that an auditory fitness-for-duty standard that requires individuals with thresholds that exceed the values defined in the new US Army H3 Profile to obtain a minimum score on the MRT80 is generally able to identify individuals who are most at risk of performing abnormally poorly on militarily relevant listening tasks. [The views expressed in this abstract are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy of the Department of the Army, Department of Defense, or U.S. Government.]
- Published
- 2021
46. Study of Effect of Smoking on Auditory Acuity.
- Author
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Prasad, B. K. and Nayak, Sunanda V.
- Subjects
SMOKING ,DEAFNESS ,AUDIOMETRY ,HEARING disorders ,COCHLEA ,ATHEROSCLEROTIC plaque - Abstract
Background: The relationship between smoking and hearing loss has been debated. Smoking appears to have an effect on auditory acuity and the proposed mechanisms are the direct oxidative damage on cochlea caused by toxic substances inhaled with the cigarette smoke or to the acceleration of the atherosclerotic process in the cochlear artery. Objectives: To record the auditory thresholds of age matched male smokers and non-smokers of age group 20-40 yrs, using pure tone audiometer and compare the auditory thresholds between the groups. Method: Age matched male 100 smokers and 100 non-smokers were subjected to pure tone audiometric assessment. The smoking history in terms of pack-years was also noted. The data was statistically analyzed. Results: Smokers group were significantly hearing impaired than the non-smokers group. The hearing impairment was noted at all frequencies tested. Higher frequencies were more affected than the lower frequencies. The auditory thresholds of smokers had significant positive correlation with smoking history, indicating that auditory thresholds rise as the number of pack-years increase. Conclusion: Smoking causes hearing impairment. The higher frequencies are more affected. The auditory thresholds rise as the number of pack-years increase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Severe constraints for sound communication in a frog from the South American temperate forest.
- Author
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Penna, Mario, Plaza, Alicia, and Moreno-Gómez, Felipe
- Subjects
- *
FROG sounds , *ANIMAL communication , *TEMPERATE climate , *FORESTS & forestry , *ANURA , *DECIBEL meters , *SOUND pressure - Abstract
The efficiency of acoustic communication depends on the power generated by the sound source, the quality of the environment across which signals propagate, the environmental noise and the sensitivity of the intended receivers. Eupsophus calcaratus, an anuran from the temperate austral forest, communicates by means of an advertisement call of weak intensity in a sound-attenuating environment. To estimate the range over which these frogs communicate effectively, we conducted measurements of sound level and degradation patterns of propagating advertisement calls in the field, and measurements of auditory thresholds to pure tones and to natural calls in laboratory conditions. The results show that E. calcaratus produces weak advertisement calls of about 72 dB sound pressure level (SPL) at 0.25 m from the caller. The signals are affected by attenuation and degradation patterns as they propagate in their native environment, reaching average values of 61 and 51 dB SPL at 1 and 2 m from the sound source, respectively. Midbrain multi-unit recordings show a relatively low auditory sensitivity, with thresholds of about 58 dB SPL for conspecific calls, which are likely to restrict communication to distances shorter than 2 m, a remarkably short range as compared to other anurans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Pure-tone auditory thresholds are decreased in depressed people with post-traumatic stress disorder
- Author
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Aubert-Khalfa, Stéphanie, Granier, Jean-Pierre, Reynaud, Emmanuelle, El Khoury, Myriam, Grosse, Eva-Maria, Samuelian, Jean-Claude, and Blin, Olivier
- Subjects
- *
POST-traumatic stress disorder , *AUDITORY cortex , *BONE conduction , *THRESHOLD (Perception) , *AUDIOMETRY , *ETIOLOGY of diseases , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Depression has been related to sensory modulation and notably to auditory modifications such as alterations in auditory event-related potentials, abnormal patterns of auditory habituation, increased activation of primary and secondary auditory cortex, and higher bilateral auditory thresholds. However, few experiments have considered the exploration of the auditory system in depression. The aim of the experiment is to further explore auditory thresholds across a higher number of frequencies than has previously been undertaken in depressed subjects, to determine whether thresholds are modified as compared to controls, and if so, at which frequencies. Methods: 25 pure-tones covering a large range of frequencies from 125Hz to 8kHz were used to measure both air and bone conduction (AC and BC respectively) hearing thresholds. 13 patients with depression and post-traumatic disorder matched for age, sex and education level with 13 healthy subjects, were tested. Results: Hearing thresholds were found to be significantly poorer in depressed participants than in controls for frequencies from 2.75Hz to 8kHz in BC, and for 0.5, 0.75, 0.875 and 2.0–8.0kHz pure-tone frequencies in AC. Limitations: Given that the depressed patients also had comorbid post-traumatic disorder, it should be verified whether their modified pure-tone audiometry is only related to depression. Conclusions: The AC and BC pure-tone auditory threshold measurement may provide new and different insights into the aetiology and evolution of depression. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. THE DEPENDENCE OF BEHAVIORAL AUDITORY THRESHOLDS ON THE DELAY OF ECHO-LIKE SIGNALS IN NOCTUID MOTHS (LEPIDOPTERA, NOCTUIDAE).
- Author
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LAPSHIN, D. N. and VORONTSOV, D. D.
- Subjects
- *
MOTHS , *LEPIDOPTERA , *AUDITORY pathways , *BAT sounds , *PREDATION , *TIGER moths , *NOCTUIDAE , *ARCTIIDAE - Abstract
The auditory system of noctuoid moths capable to respond to ultrasounds has long been a model for anti-predator studies in neuroethology. Many moths avoid hunting bats by listening for their echolocation calls and taking evasive manoeuvres to escape predation. Besides these flight defences, certain tiger moths (Arctiidae) emit high-frequency clicks to jam the echolocator of an attacking bat. Another suggested function for ultrasonic audition in moths along with their capability to emit loud ultrasonic clicks was pulse echolocation. However, it seemed difficult to arrange sufficient temporal resolution in a simple invertebrate auditory system. Here we present an evidence of moth's capability to perceive an echo following its own click with a very short delay. The behavioral responses of moths to the acoustic pulses imitating echoes of their own clicks were investigated under conditions of tethered flight. It has been found that such echo-like stimulation evokes an increase in average emission rate of own acoustic signals in moths. Auditory thresholds were measured in two noctuid species (Enargia paleacea Esp. and Blepharita satura Schiff.) at stimulus delays 0.2, 0.3, 0.5 and 1 ms in relation to the respective moth clicks. Our findings reveal the ability of these moths to perceive echoes of their own signals, thus demonstrating potential possibility for use of pulse echolocation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Amalgam dental fillings and hearing loss.
- Author
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Rothwell, Janet A. and Boyd, Paul J.
- Subjects
- *
DENTAL amalgams , *SMOKING , *HEARING disorders , *MERCURY , *PRESBYCUSIS - Abstract
In this study we investigated the effects of amalgam dental fillings on auditory thresholds. Participants (n=39) were non-smoking women age 40 to 45. Regression and correlation analyses were performed between auditory thresholds, measured from 0.25 to 16 kHz, and the number/surface area of dental fillings, using the ASHA criteria for ototoxic change as a reference for comparison. No significant correlation (p>0.05) was found between composite (non-amalgam) filling or drilling data and auditory thresholds. However, there was a significant positive linear correlation between amalgam filling data and auditory thresholds at 8, 11.2, 12.5, 14, and 16 kHz. The strongest association (r=0.587, n=39, p<.001, r2=0.345) was at 14 kHz, where each additional amalgam filling was associated with a 2.4 dB decline in hearing threshold (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3-3.5 dB). The results suggest an association between more amalgam fillings and poorer thresholds at higher frequencies, which could contribute to presbyacusis in developed countries. This provides further argument for the use of amalgams to be phased out where suitable alternatives exist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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