Slow Cortical Potentials and Amplification—Part II: Acoustic Measures
暂无分享,去创建一个
Lorienne M. Jenstad | Susan Marynewich | David R. Stapells | D. Stapells | L. Jenstad | Susan Marynewich
[1] Harvey Dillon. So, baby, how does it sound? Cortical assessment of infants with hearing aids , 2005 .
[2] J Agnew,et al. Just noticeable and objectionable group delays in digital hearing aids. , 2000, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.
[3] Diane Kurtzberg,et al. Effects of Sensorineural Hearing Loss and Personal Hearing Aids on Cortical Event-Related Potential and Behavioral Measures of Speech-Sound Processing , 2005, Ear and hearing.
[4] K A Beauchaine,et al. Comparison of onset and steady-state responses of hearing aids: implications for use of the auditory brainstem response in the selection of hearing aids. , 1987, Journal of speech and hearing research.
[5] Curtis J. Billings,et al. Effects of Hearing Aid Amplification and Stimulus Intensity on Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials , 2007, Audiology and Neurotology.
[6] D. Stapells,et al. Slow Cortical Potentials and Amplification—Part I: N1-P2 Measures , 2012, International journal of otolaryngology.
[7] J. Suzuki,et al. Effects of rise time on simultaneously recorded auditory-evoked potentials from the early, middle and late ranges. , 1979, Audiology : official organ of the International Society of Audiology.
[8] L. Graziani,et al. Auditory‐evoked responses in normal, brain‐damaged, and deaf infants , 1967, Neurology.
[9] G. Christopher Stecker,et al. Human evoked cortical activity to signal-to-noise ratio and absolute signal level , 2009, Hearing Research.
[10] Sudhir Gupta,et al. Case Studies , 2013, Journal of Clinical Immunology.
[11] Harvey Dillon,et al. The relationship between obligatory cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) and functional measures in young infants. , 2007, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.
[12] Michelle R. Molis,et al. Cortical Encoding of Signals in Noise: Effects of Stimulus Type and Recording Paradigm , 2010, Ear and hearing.
[13] D B Hawkins,et al. Complex and pure-tone signals in the evaluation of hearing-aid characteristics. , 1990, Journal of speech and hearing research.
[14] Susan D Scollie,et al. Hearing aid processing changes tone burst onset: effect on cortical auditory evoked potentials in individuals with normal audiometric thresholds. , 2012, American journal of audiology.
[15] King Chung,et al. Challenges and Recent Developments in Hearing Aids: Part I. Speech Understanding in Noise, Microphone Technologies and Noise Reduction Algorithms , 2004, Trends in amplification.
[16] Harvey Dillon,et al. Obligatory Cortical Auditory Evoked Potential Waveform Detection and Differentiation Using a Commercially Available Clinical System: HEARLab™ , 2011, Ear and hearing.
[17] Susan D Scollie,et al. Evaluation of Electroacoustic Test Signals I: Comparison with Amplified Speech , 2002, Ear and hearing.
[18] David A Fabry. Nonlinear Hearing Aids and Verification of Fitting Targets , 2003, Trends in amplification.
[19] Nicole M. Gage,et al. Temporal integration: reflections in the M100 of the auditory evoked field , 2000, Neuroreport.
[20] Gitte Keidser,et al. Sound quality comparisons of advanced hearing aids , 2003 .
[21] M G Block,et al. Insertion gain measured with three probe tube systems. , 1988, Ear and hearing.
[22] H. Dillon,et al. The Effect of Stimulus Duration and Inter-stimulus Interval on Cortical Responses in Infants , 2006 .
[23] Pamela E Souza,et al. The Neural Representation of Consonant-Vowel Transitions in Adults Who Wear Hearing Aids , 2006, Trends in amplification.
[24] Brian C J Moore,et al. Tolerable Hearing Aid Delays. II. Estimation of Limits Imposed During Speech Production , 2002, Ear and hearing.
[25] H. Davis,et al. Effects of duration and rise time of tone bursts on evoked V potentials. , 1968, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.
[26] R. Burkard. Human Auditory Evoked Potentials , 2010 .
[27] H. Dillon,et al. The relationship between cortical auditory evoked potential (CAEP) detection and estimated audibility in infants with sensorineural hearing loss , 2012, International journal of audiology.
[28] M A Stone,et al. Tolerable hearing aid delays. I. Estimation of limits imposed by the auditory path alone using simulated hearing losses. , 1999, Ear and hearing.
[29] Brian C J Moore,et al. Tolerable Hearing Aid Delays. III. Effects on Speech Production and Perception of Across-Frequency Variation in Delay , 2003, Ear and hearing.
[30] Janet E. Shanks,et al. Tympanometry , 1981, Ear and hearing.
[31] A. J. Klein,et al. Hearing-aid-processed tone pips: electroacoustic and ABR characteristics. , 1999, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.
[32] R Hari,et al. Cerebral magnetic responses to noise bursts and pauses of different durations. , 1989, Audiology : official organ of the International Society of Audiology.
[33] P G Stelmachowicz,et al. Measures of Hearing Aid Gain for Real Speech , 1996, Ear and hearing.
[34] Harvey Dillon,et al. Aided Cortical Auditory Evoked Potentials for Hearing Instrument Evaluation in Infants , 2005 .
[35] Harvey Dillon,et al. Cortical auditory evoked potentials in the assessment of auditory neuropathy: two case studies. , 2007, Journal of the American Academy of Audiology.