Abstract

The relationship between behavioral thresholds and auditory brainstem response (ABR) latencies for 4 and 8 kHz tone pips were examined in normal-hearing 3-month-olds, 6-month-olds and adults. The latencies of waves I and V and the I–V interval of the ABR were analyzed. A linear latency-intensity function was also fit to each subject's latencies for each wave at several levels. The y-intercept of the latency-intensity function was used as a summary measure of latency to examine behavior-ABR correlations. The pattern of age-related change in behavioral threshold was not closely matched by age-related latency reduction for Wave I, Wave V or the I–V interval. However, 3-month-olds with higher behavioral thresholds had longer Wave V latencies and longer I–V intervals than 3-month-olds with lower behavioral thresholds. There was no significant difference in latency between 6-month-olds or adults with higher thresholds and 6-month-olds or adults with lower thresholds. There was also a significant correlation between the Wave V-Wave I latency-intensity intercept difference and behavioral threshold at both 4 and 8 kHz among 3-month-olds. The correlation was not significant among 6-month-olds or adults. These findings suggest that one of the factors responsible for immature behavioral thresholds at 3 months is related to transmission through the auditory brainstem. Because variability in hearing threshold among normal-hearing adults is low, it is not surprising that behavioral threshold is unrelated to ABR latency in this group. However, the lack of such a relationship among 6-month-olds implies that structures central to the auditory brainstem, either sensory or nonsensory, or both, must be responsible for immature behavioral thresholds after 6 months of age.

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