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Comparative Study
. 1995 Aug;98(2 Pt 1):921-30.
doi: 10.1121/1.414350.

The development of frequency resolution in humans as revealed by the auditory brain-stem response recorded with notched-noise masking

Affiliations
Comparative Study

The development of frequency resolution in humans as revealed by the auditory brain-stem response recorded with notched-noise masking

C Abdala et al. J Acoust Soc Am. 1995 Aug.

Abstract

Studies of tuning in infants have reported that auditory brain-stem response (ABR) tuning curves generated using low-frequency probes are adultlike by 3 months of age while high-frequency tuning curves remain immature [Folsom and Wynne, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 81, 412-417 (1987)]. Behavioral studies have similarly reported adultlike low-frequency psychoacoustic tuning curves by 3 months with high-frequency tuning curves immature until approximately 6 months of age [L. Olsho, Infant Behav. Dev. 8, 371-384 (1985); Spetner and Olsho, Child Dev. 61, 632-652 (1990); Schneider et al., J. Exp. Psych.: Human Percept. Perform. 16, 642-652 (1990)]. Prior to this experiment, there have been no ABR studies of the development of frequency resolution for infants older than 3 months. In this study, notched-noise tuning functions were constructed from wave-V amplitude data for 3-month-old, 6-month-old, and adult subjects. Tone-pip stimuli at 1000, 4000, and 8000 Hz (50 dB nHL) were presented simultaneously with notched-noise masking centered at frequencies related to the tone-pip frequency (1/3-oct intervals above and below the probe frequency). By plotting wave-V amplitude across notched-noise center frequency, isointensity tuning functions were generated for the three subject groups at the three probe frequencies. Auditory filter width (Q) and slope (dB/oct) were measured from each notched-noise tuning function in order to qualify degree of tuning. Consistent with previous studies, results showed that 3-month-old infants do not have adultlike tuning for high-frequency stimulation (8000 Hz). In contrast, by 6 months of age, tuning-function width (Q) is adultlike for both high- and low-frequency probes. These results, combined with previously reported evidence that the human cochlea is fully tuned at birth [Abdala et al., submitted to Hear. Res. (1995); Bargones and Burns, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 83, 1809-1816 (1988)], suggest that immaturities in the auditory-neural system contribute to the broad high-frequency tuning consistently observed in 3-month-old human infants.

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