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Original Article

Place-Specific Derived Cochlear Microphonics from Human Ears

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Pages 131-141 | Received 06 Jun 1991, Accepted 29 Jul 1991, Published online: 12 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

The high-pass noise masking technique was used to obtain derived frequency-specific cochlear microphonics (CM) from subtracted waveforms to rarefaction and condensation stimuli recorded with a tympanic membrane electrode. Two characteristics suggest that the response is place-specific CM: the derived response retains the same frequency as the stimulating toneburst and the response follows the stimulus polarity. For click stimulation, derived neural responses make the place-specific CM difficult to observe except in the 2–1 kHz derived band. In contrast, place-specific CM evoked by 0.5 and 1 kHz tonebursts can usually be detected in at least three derived bands. The amplitude of the response is largest in the derived band with center-frequency (CF) just above that of the toneburst. This discovery of a place-specific CM offers the possibility of assessing (outer) hair cell function in the apical part of the human cochlea.

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