Probing apical-basal differences in the human cochlea using distortion-product otoacoustic emission phase
Author(s) -
Anders T. Christensen,
Carolina Abdala,
Christopher A. Shera
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.5038495
Subject(s) - otoacoustic emission , cochlea , stimulus (psychology) , acoustics , physics , audiology , inner ear , mathematics , hearing loss , psychology , anatomy , medicine , psychotherapist
Distortion-product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) phase is shaped by interaction between the evoking stimulus waves. Near-invariant at high frequencies, DPOAE phase-vs-frequency functions measured at xed ratios bend into sloping functions at low frequencies. The different phase behaviors observed suggest that the mechanics underlying the generation of OAEs differ in the halves of the cochlea. To map out the phenomenological extent of low-to-mid frequency phase bends, this study recorded DPOAE responses from 20 normal-hearing human adult ears for a wide range of stimulus frequencies, f 1 and f 2 , where f 2 frequency sweeps from 0.25 to 8 kHz, and the f 2 / f 1 ratio varies from 1.05 to 1.49. Our preliminary results show two transitions in the phase slopes. One near 2.6 kHz in agreement with the literature, and another of opposite polarity near 0.75 kHz which has not been reported before. We nd that the f 2 frequencies marking these dening phase features are invariant with stimulus ratio. Even as the underlying mechanics remain unknown, the invariance opens the door for DPOAE phase to reliably characterize apical-basal differences across age groups and species.
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