Journal Article10.1044/JSHD.2904.448
Delayed feedback audiometry.
Howard B. Ruhm,William A. Cooper +1 more
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About: This article is published in Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders. The article was published on 01 Nov 1964. The article focuses on the topics: Audiometry.
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Citations
Evoked Response (EEG) Audiometry in Nonorganic Hearing Loss
TL;DR: Clinically, the problem is not one of determining the presence or absence of a nonorganic loss since the behavioral characteristics of these patients are well known, and the many malingering tests which may be applied provide little, if any, help.
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Functional hearing loss and its relationship to resolved hearing levels
Stanley A. Gelfand,Shlomo Silman +1 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest the use of an internalized, loudness level-based anchor by subjects with functional losses: the test signal must sound as loud as the anchor at each frequency in order for an exaggerated threshold response to be volunteered at that respective frequency.
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New tools for old tricks.
TL;DR: Otolaryngologists can anticipate seeing more patients with this type of deafness in the future, as an increasing number of dollar-linked claims can be anticipated in North America which will bring in their train an increase number of patients with functional hearing loss.
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A Descending Lot-Bekesy Screening Test for Functional Hearing Loss
TL;DR: This study investigated the screening efficiency of a descending version of Hattler's Lengthened Off-time (LOT) Bekesy test and found that the DELOT format substantially increased screening sensitivity.
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Limitations of Pure-Tone Audiometry in the Detection of Nonorganic Hearing Loss: A Case Study
Zarin Mehta
- 01 Mar 2003
TL;DR: The importance of the use of physiologic measures such as otoacoustic emissions, the middle ear muscle reflex, and auditory brainstem response testing as a cross-check for behavioral assessment and the incorporation of these tests in routine clinical practice is demonstrated.
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