Abstract

Allen et al. [Abstract in Eighteenth Midwinter Research Meeting of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology, Des Moines, IA (1995)] have found that the ear canal reflectance passes through a minimum around the frequency of a spontaneous otoacoustic emission (SOAE). They considered this result to constitute evidence against active nonlinear cochlear function as the basis for SOAEs. In order to investigate theoretically the expected behavior of ear canal reflectance in the neighborhood of a SOAE associated with an active-nonlinear cochlea, we use a simplified model in which the ear drum end of the ear canal is effectively terminated by a nonlinear-active element. Under the influence of a sinusoidal driver at the entrance of the ear canal, this element will, to a good approximation, either (1) oscillate at both the frequency of the driver (at which the reflectance is determined) and the SOAE (at a suppressed level, corresponding to nonentrainment), or (2) be entrained and only oscillate at the driving frequency. The magnitude of the nonlinear ear canal reflectance is found to exceed unity only at sufficiently low stimulus levels, and occurs under conditions of entrainment and nonentrainment of the spontaneous emission. Otherwise, the reflectance is less than unity and, as a function of frequency, has a minimum around the SOAE frequency.

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