Term
Sounds that originate in the cochlea and propagate through the middle and outer ear. Measurable using sensitive microphones placed in the ear canal |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
-In the mid 1800s, German physicist Hermann von ___ observes that air-filled cavities are tuned to specific resonant frequencies -von Helmholtz believed that the auditory system was composed of these resonators (“harmonic oscillators”), which responded to the movement of the ___ ___ -While not physiologically accurate, von Helmholtz was fundamentally correct that the cochlea acts as a ___ ___ |
|
Definition
Helmholtz; basilar membrane; frequency analyzer |
|
|
Term
-In 1928, Georg von Békésy describes the ___ ___ in the cochlea -von Békésy disagreed with von Helmholtz: he did not believe it was possible for there to be cochlear resonators tuned ___ enough to account for high-frequency hearing loss |
|
Definition
traveling wave; precisely |
|
|
Term
-In ___, renaissance man extraordinaire Thomas Gold concluded that the resonant mechanisms proposed by von Helmholtz and the traveling wave of von Békésy were both components of the cochlear analyzer -Gold postulated an oscillating ___ mechanism that should be audibly perceptible |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
-In 1978 British scientist David Kemp reports measurement of ____ emissions from the ear. -In 1979, Kemp describes similar emissions produced ___ (without a stimulus) |
|
Definition
stimulated (evoked); spontaneously |
|
|
Term
A new auditory phenomenon has been identified in the acoustic impulse of the human ear…This component of the response appears to have its origin in some ___ mechanism probably located in the cochlea, responding mechanically to auditory stimulation, and dependent upon the normal functioning of the cochlea ___ process…It is tempting to suggest that one of the functions of the outer hair cell population is the generation of this ___ energy |
|
Definition
nonlinear; transduction; mechanical |
|
|
Term
In 1982, Scandinavian scientists N.J. Johnsen and colleagues describe ____ OAEs |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
-In 1983, Hallowell ___ describes the “cochlear amplifier” and speculates (correctly, as it turns out) on the origin of OAE signals -In 1985, American audiologist William ___ describes outer hair cell motility |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is the source of the energy for the cochlear amplifier? The best hint that we have is the requirement that the outer hair cells be ___. This suggests a ___ function for OHC, with the efferent innervation providing a modulating influence, and perhaps a trophic function also. The large number of OHCs, ___ rows instead of one, may be an expression of the need for a large source of ___. |
|
Definition
intact; motor; three; power |
|
|
Term
-OAEs are believed to be by-products of the ___ ___ -No ___ involvement-Can be measured even when neural responses are ___ or when ___ nerve transmission is blocked -Related to normal functioning of OHC-____ to agents known to affect OHC function -Affected by alterations to the ___ innervation systems of OHC-Contralateral suppression, direct electrical stimulation of ___ fibers appear to affect OAE amplitude |
|
Definition
cochlear amplifier; neural; absent; VIII; Vulnerable; efferent; efferent |
|
|
Term
-In 1989, F.P. Harris, Brenda Lonsbury-Martin and colleagues at Baylor University systematically study ___ of distortion tones on DPOAE -In 1992, American hearing scientist Peter ___ describes threshold sensitivity and frequency tuning of the outer hair cells |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
You want 2 frequencies that are close together but not ___ ___, which is why f1 and f2 are separated by a ratio of ___. You don't want the 2 tones to look like ___ big peak, you want 2 ___ peaks. |
|
Definition
too close; 1.22; one; separate |
|
|
Term
Spontaneous OAEs: -No ___ needed -Present in less than ___% of humans. Comparable prevalence in newborns, children, and adults -More common in ___ than in ___. -No clear effect of ___ if hearing sensitivity is normal. -Frequencies tend to be stable over ___ periods of time. ___ frequencies are common. Amplitudes may ___ (e.g., middle ear effects) -Independent of ___ |
|
Definition
stimulus; 70; females; males; aging; long; Multiple; fluctuate; tinnitus |
|
|
Term
Transient Evoked OAEs (TEOAE): -Measured following introduction of a ___ stimulus – click or tone burst -Evaluated in terms of ___, ___, and ___ -___ in nearly all ears with normal sensitivity and ME function -ABSENT in nearly all ears with SNHL greater than __-__ dB HL |
|
Definition
transient (brief); amplitude; reproducibility; SNR; PRESENT; 30-50 [image] |
|
|
Term
Distortion Product OAEs (DPOAE): -Non-linear distortion produced by simultaneous introduction of tones at certain ___ ___ -When f1 and f2 are close in frequency, they interact to produce energy at predictable ___ ___ |
|
Definition
frequency ratios; discrete frequencies |
|
|
Term
What are some clinical applications of OAEs? |
|
Definition
noise/music exposure, monitor ototoxicity, assess suspected functional hearing loss, cochlear vs retrocochlear, CAPD, hearing screenings, assessment of tinnitus and hyperacusis, newborn hearing screening |
|
|
Term
What are some advantages of OAEs? |
|
Definition
doesn't require behavioral response, sensitive to OHC function, ear and frequency specific, can be sedated or asleep, no sound booth, good cross check, can be quick, portable, and relatively inexpensive |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
can be affected by noise, affected by ME disorder, doesn't provide info about IHC, can be abnormal with normal audiogram and vice versa, aren't detectable with HL >30-50 dB HL, not a true test of hearing, and doesn't measure neural auditory function |
|
|
Term
Probe Components: -DPOAE: ___ tubes. ___ stimulus drivers (f1 and f2), microphone -TEOAE: ___ tubes. ___ stimulus driver (transient), microphone |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Components of the OAE System: -Stimulus components: ___ generator, ____ circuitry, and ___ -Measurement components: ___, Band-pass filter (Isolate energy at expected DP frequencies), ___, and Analog-to-digital converter which is housed in a computer or stand-alone device |
|
Definition
Signal; Amplifier/attenuator; Speaker; Microphone; Amplifier; |
|
|
Term
-OAEs are VERY ___-intensity signals -As a result, OAE devices require extensive ___ of the signal to extract the response from the noise floor |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are some sources of noise? |
|
Definition
microphone noise, ambient noise in the test setting, breathing, rubbing of the probe tube against clothing, jaw movements, muscle movements, and blood flow |
|
|
Term
Time-synchronous averaging: -Each time the stimulus is presented, the ___ in the ear canal is sampled -Starting point of the sample is ___ with the onset of the stimulus -Stimulus presented hundreds of times, with the sample averaged across each ___ |
|
Definition
sound; synchronized; presentation |
|
|
Term
Averaging: -Assumption: each time the OAE is sampled, it should be the ___ -Therefore, any noise or artifact that does not recur in synch with the stimulus is noise, which will be random and eventually will ___ out |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are some actions you can take to minimize the noise effects on OAE recordings? |
|
Definition
-eliminate extraneous noise sources in test room -close door to test room -insert probe deeply -secure probe cord -instruct patient to remain quiet and still (if feasible) -position test ear away from equipment -modify protocol (to frequencies > 2000 Hz) |
|
|
Term
Are there ANSI standards for OAEs? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How often should OAE units be checked? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
OAE Calibration-Frequency: -An electronic counter can be used to determine whether probe signals for distortion-product OAEs are ___ in terms of ___ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
OAE Calibration-Intensity: -In many cases, the OAE probe may be coupled to a 2-cc coupler (HA-type) and sound level meter with octave band filter to measure ___ and check for ___ -For DPOAE, each stimulus channel must be measured ___ -For TEOAE, SLM must be able to sample ___ noises |
|
Definition
intensity; distortion; independently; impulse |
|
|