Abstract
Acoustic reflex maximum amplitude measurements elicited both contralaterally and ipsilaterally were obtained from subjects with noise-induced hearing loss and compared with those obtained from normal-hearing subjects. The eliciting signal was a pure tone of 1 kHz presented for 1 000 ms. The groups were matched on age, sex, static immittance and ear canal volume. Acoustic reflex amplitudes were clearly reduced in noise-impaired subjects compared with normal-hearing subjects at a frequency where their hearing thresholds were normal.