| Literature DB >> 7325307 |
B L Lonsbury-Martin, G K Martin.
Abstract
The amount and duration of temporary threshold shift produced by exposure to moderately loud sounds were quantitatively examined in rhesus monkeys using a simple, behavioral reaction-time procedure. Subjects were exposed to pure tones (100 dB SPL) either at the threshold test frequency or half an octave below (-1/2 OCT) the test frequency, usually for a duration of 3-minutes. Many features of the results were comparable to those observed in human subjects following exposure to similar sounds: (1) both the magnitude and the time course of recovery from the hearing loss were a function of the frequency and duration of the exposure stimulus with higher-frequency and longer-lasting stimuli producing greater threshold shifts and longer recovery time courses; (2) recovery time courses were monotonic and approximately exponential; (3) at low- and mid-frequency regions of hearing, intense stimulation at the test frequency and at -1/2 OCT produced similar threshold shifts and durations of recovery, while for high-frequency hearing -1/2 OCT stimuli always yielded greater losses and longer recovery periods; (4) although the peak hearing loss was either at , or a half octave above, the exposure frequency, the overall threshold-shift pattern was always assymmetrically distributed toward higher frequencies; (5) alterations in functions relating response latency to stimulus intensity were demonstrable. These psychophysical experiments form a framework that will permit further investigations into the physiologic basis of temporary threshold shift in an animal model highly similar to man.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1981 PMID: 7325307 DOI: 10.1016/s0196-0709(81)80042-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Otolaryngol ISSN: 0196-0709 Impact factor: 1.808