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Presentation
Gap Detection Threshold in Ears with and without Spontaneous Otoacoustic Emissions
16th International Congress on Acoustics (1998)
  • Jacek Smurzynski, University of Basel
  • Rudolf Probst, University of Basel
Abstract
Gap detection was measured for two groups of normally hearing young adults using broad-band noise stimuli. Group I consisted of subjects who exhibitcd both strong spontaneous and click-evoked otoacoustic emissions (SOAEs and CEOAEs). Group II included individuals with no SOms in either ear and weak CEOAEs. An adaptive 2FC gap detection task was performed for the stimuli presented at either 10, 20, 30, or 50 dB SL. At 10 dB SL stimulus level, the ears in Group 1 exhibited greater intersubject variability and higher mean gap detection thresholds than those in Group ll. At higher SLs, there were no differences between the results for the two groups. A short gap in the broad-band stimulus presented near the threshold is masked by SOAEs and emissions evoked by the stimulus. 
Keywords
  • gap detection threshold,
  • spontaneous otoacoustic emissions,
  • SOAE
Publication Date
1998
Location
Seattle, WA
Comments
An author, or his research sponsor, may reproduce his paper in full. This document was originally published in the Proceedings of the 16th International Congress on Acoustics.
Citation Information
Jacek Smurzynski and Rudolf Probst. "Gap Detection Threshold in Ears with and without Spontaneous Otoacoustic Emissions" 16th International Congress on Acoustics (1998)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jacek-smurzynski/55/