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Title: Human efferent adaptation of DPOAEs in the L1,L2 space. Author: Meinke DK, Stagner BB, Martin GK, Lonsbury-Martin BL. Journal: Hear Res; 2005 Oct; 208(1-2):89-100. PubMed ID: 16019174. Abstract: The adaptive properties of distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) at 2f(1)-f2 were investigated in 12 ears of normally hearing adults aged 18-30 years using long-lasting 1-s primary-tone on-times. In this manner, DPOAE adaptation at a single f2 of 1.55 kHz (f2/f1=1.21) was evaluated as a function of the levels of the primary tones in a matrix of L1, L2 settings, which varied from 45 to 80 dB SPL, in 5-dB steps. DPOAEs were elicited under both monaural and binaural stimulus-presentation conditions. Adaptation was defined as the difference in DPOAE levels between the initial 92-ms baseline measure using a standard protocol and one obtained during the final 92 ms of the prolonged 1-s primary-tones. These differences were averaged across subjects to create contour plots of mean adaptation in the L1,L2 space. The 2f(1)-f2 DPOAE revealed consistent regions of suppression (-0.5 dB difference) or enhancement (+0.5 dB difference) with respect to baseline measures within the L(1),L(2) matrix for both acoustic-stimulation conditions. Specifically, 2f(1)-f2 DPOAE suppressions of 1-2 dB occurred for both monaural and binaural presentations, typically at level combinations in which L1>L2. In contrast, larger 2f(1)-f2 DPOAE enhancements of 3-4 dB occurred for only the binaural condition, at primary-tone level combinations where L1<L2. Although adaptation activity was also evaluated for the DPOAEs at f(2)-f1, 2f(2)-f1, and 3f(1)-2f2, these emissions were either immeasurable (e.g., f(2)-f1) or only present in a subset of subjects over a narrow range of primary-tone frequencies and levels that did not support a systematic analysis. In summary, the 2f(1)-f2 results suggest that a potentially important area for adaptation measures exists in the L1,L2 space, when L1 is lower than L2. This combination of primary-tone levels can lead to large DPOAE adaptation effects that may be related to a notch in the DPOAE response/growth or input/output (I/O) function.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]