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Clinical Note

Effective masking levels for bone-conducted amplitude- and frequency-modulated tones in adults with normal hearing: A behavioural study

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Pages 216-219 | Received 22 Jul 2011, Accepted 06 Sep 2011, Published online: 23 Nov 2011
 

Abstract

Objectives: (1) to estimate the amount of masking needed to eliminate perceptual responses to 1000- and 4000-Hz bone-conducted mixed amplitude- (AM) and frequency-modulated (FM) tonal stimuli in adults with normal hearing, and (2) to compare these findings to recently reported effective masking levels (EMLs) for bone-conducted 80-Hz ASSRs. Design: Stimuli were bone-conducted single sinusoidal tones with carrier frequencies of 1000 and 4000 Hz (Mixed modulation (MM): 100% AM & 25% FM at 85–101 Hz) presented to the temporal bone at 15–45 dB HL for 1000 Hz and 25–35 dB HL for 4000 Hz. Air-conducted 1- and 4-Hz narrow-band noise maskers were presented to both ears simultaneously using ER-3A insert earphones. EMLs for each of the stimuli were determined behaviourally. Study sample: Seventeen adults (mean age: 27.6 years) with normal hearing participated. Results: Overall, EMLs were 10–17 dB higher for perceptual responses compared to ASSRs for 1000 and 4000 Hz. Linear regression analyses revealed that behavioural and ASSR EMLs were not significantly correlated for most of the stimuli presented except for 1000-Hz presented at 45 dB HL (r =.64, p = .013). Conclusions: EMLs are frequency- and testing method-dependent for bone-conducted MM tonal stimuli for normal-hearing adults.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by a Discovery Grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to Dr. Susan Small.

Declaration of interests: The author reports no con icts of interest. The author alone is responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

Note

1. It is important to note that a small range of values, as seen for the behavioural and ASSR EMLs for these stimulus conditions, can make it more difficult for correlations to reach statistical significance.

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