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Clinical Trial
. 1995 Jul;87(1-2):96-103.
doi: 10.1016/0378-5955(95)00082-f.

Binaural noise suppresses linear click-evoked otoacoustic emissions more than ipsilateral or contralateral noise

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Binaural noise suppresses linear click-evoked otoacoustic emissions more than ipsilateral or contralateral noise

C I Berlin et al. Hear Res. 1995 Jul.

Abstract

We studied the efferent suppression of click-evoked otoacoustic emissions with 65 dB SPL of white noise presented to left, right, or sometimes both, ears for 408 ms. Each burst of noise preceded a series of four unipolar 80 microseconds 65 dB peak Sound Pressure clicks, presented to the left ear only. The first click of the four-click group followed the end of the noise by either 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 or 200 ms; each subsequent click was offset by 20 additional ms via an ILO88 system with special programming modifications. Conditions were alternated so that a 'without noise' condition preceded a 'with noise' condition for three repetitions of 600 clicks per trial. Seven subjects with normal hearing participated in the study, and three of the seven participated in a test-retest reliability study. Results showed the greatest suppression followed binaural stimulation ending within one to five ms of the first click in the pulse train. Somewhat less suppression was seen following ipsilateral stimulation. The least amount of suppression was seen following contralateral stimulation, suggesting that previous research using contralateral stimulation may underestimate efferent effects. We saw no effects when the end of the noise was 100 ms or more away from the beginning of the click train.

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