Abstract

Acoustic intermodulation distortion products were measured in 15 ear canals of chinchillas with normal or damaged ears. Pretreatment results showed that when two primary tones at frequencies f1 and f2, f1 less than f2, were presented at levels from 30 to 90 dB SPL, acoustic distortion products at 2f1-f2 and 2f2-f1 were 30 to 50 dB below primary-tone levels. Noise exposures that caused temporary or permanent hearing loss produced corresponding temporary or permanent reductions in distortion-product levels. Mechanical damage to the cochlea or middle ear reduced the distortion-product levels to below the noise floor of the measurement system. Comparisons of distortion-product level with behaviorally measured threshold shift and cochlear histopathology suggest that, in the absence of conductive impairment, the level of 2f1-f2 or 2f2-f1 can be used as a sensitive indicator of hearing sensitivity and the condition of the cochlea.

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