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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.25 456-461 September 1982.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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An Empirical Evaluation of the Effects of High-Pass Noise on the Whole-Nerve Action Potential

Michael P. Gorga 1
Paul J. Abbas 2

1 Boys Town Institute, Omaha, Nebraska
2 University of Iowa, Iowa City

A number of methods are presented for evaluating the effects of high-pass noise on the whole-nerve action potential (AP). These methods include measurements of AP thresholds, amplitude-versus-level functions, decrement in AP amplitude-versus-masker level functions, and AP tuning curves. Examinations of threshold shifts as a function of tone-burst frequency and AP amplitude-versus-level with and without the presentation of high-pass noise indicate that basal portions of the cochlear partition can be masked effectively. Decrement in AP amplitude-versus-masker level functions and subsequently constructed AP tuning curves were used to verify that the presentation of high-pass noise did not alter the frequency response of that region of the basilar membrane responding to a 4000-Hz tone-burst probe. As a result, we conclude that high-pass noise may be used to mask the response from remote regions of the cochlea without altering response characteristics from lower frequency regions.

Submitted on May 11, 1981
Accepted on August 26, 1981


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