Abstract

The dynamics of contralateral acoustic suppression were studied using real time (millisecond resolution) distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) in chinchillas and humans. Latency of DPOAE suppression onset is 26 ms in chinchillas and 45 ms in humans. After onset, suppression builds over time before tending to plateau, reflecting a temporal integration process with a time constant of 100 ms (chinchillas). In chinchillas, suppression persists for 40 ms even when elicited by stimuli as short as 5 ms. With stimuli >40 ms, offset and onset latencies are similar and duration of suppression equals that of the contralateral stimulus. A comparison of DPOAE suppression onset latency with neural latency data from the pathways involved suggests the following timing scheme: stimulus onset to activity in (ventral) cochlear nucleus, 4 ms (15% of delay); transfer to olivocochlear efferents, 9 ms (35%); efferent conduction to presynaptic OHC site, 4 ms (15%); synaptic and mechanical events at OHCs, 9 ms (35% of delay).

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