Temporal suppression of long-latency click-evoked otoacoustic emissions
Abstract
This paper investigates suppression of click-evoked otoacoustic emissions (CEOAEs) using the same paradigm as Hine and Thornton (2002) in which a suppressor-click was presented close in time to a test-click. The experiment was repeated and the analysis extended to long-latency CEOAEs (duration > 20 ms), whereas the previous study only focussed on the 'short-latency' CEOAE (duration < 20 ms). The hypothesis was that suppression would continue on the long-latency CEOAE since this region is probably dominated by spontaneous OAEs (SOAEs) synchronising with the click stimulus. The results for ve exemplary subjects showed that suppression remained on the long-latency CEOAE, indicating that both SOAEs and CEOAEs originate from the same cochlear nonlinearities, as suggested by Kemp and Chum (1980a). Further proof of suppression of long-latency SOAE components was sought in the spectral domain. A comparison of the magnitude of certain SOAE components in the suppressed and unsuppressed condition for a particular subject showed that suppression affected SOAE components in a similar way as the purely click-evoked OAE components.
References
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