1. Temporal integration of the contralateral acoustic reflex threshold for a 1000 hz tonal activator and its age-related changes.
- Author
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Emmer MB, Silman S, Silverman CA, and Levitt H
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Audiometry, Pure-Tone, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Aging physiology, Auditory Threshold physiology, Reflex, Acoustic physiology
- Abstract
Background: Previous research has noted an age effect on the temporal integration of the acoustic reflex for a noise activator., Purpose: To determine whether the age effect earlier noted for a noise activator will be noted for a tonal activator., Research Design: Comparison of ARTs of younger and older groups at activating stimulus durations of 12, 25, 50, 100, 200, 300, 500, and 1000 msec., Study Sample: Two groups of adults with normal-hearing sensitivity: one group of 20 young adults (ten males and ten females, ages 18-29 years, with a mean age of 24 years) and one group of 20 older adults (ten males and ten females, ages 59-75 years, with a mean age of 67.5 years)., Results: A significant main effect for duration was obtained. That is, as the duration increased, the acoustic reflex threshold for the 1000 Hz tonal activator decreased. The interactions of duration x age group and duration x hearing level were not significant. There was a nonsignificant main effect (p = .889) for the between-subjects factor of age., Conclusion: Results contradict the findings for broadband noise.
- Published
- 2009
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