
It has been proposed that the clinical accuracy of distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) is affected by the interaction of distortion and reflection sources contributing to the response. This study evaluated changes in dichotomous-decision test performance and threshold-prediction accuracy when DPOAE source contribution was controlled. Data were obtained from 205 normal and impaired ears with L2 ranging from 0 to 80dB SPL and f2=2 and 4kHz. Data were collected for control conditions (no suppressor, f3) and with f3 presented at three levels that previously had been shown to reduce the reflection-source contribution. The results indicated that controlling source contribution with a suppressor did not improve diagnostic accuracy (as reflected by relative operating characteristic curve area) and frequently resulted in poorer test performance compared to control conditions. Likewise, correlations between DPOAE and behavioral thresholds were not strengthened when using the suppressors to control source contribution. While improvements in test accuracy were observed for a subset of subjects (normal ears with the smallest DPOAEs and impaired ears with the largest DPOAEs), the lack of improvement for the larger, unselected subject group suggests that DPOAEs should be recorded in the clinic without attempting to control the source contribution with a suppressor.
Time Factors, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural, Otoacoustic Emissions, Spontaneous, Reproducibility of Results, Auditory Threshold, Cochlea, Dichotic Listening Tests, Acoustic Stimulation, ROC Curve, Predictive Value of Tests, Humans
Time Factors, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural, Otoacoustic Emissions, Spontaneous, Reproducibility of Results, Auditory Threshold, Cochlea, Dichotic Listening Tests, Acoustic Stimulation, ROC Curve, Predictive Value of Tests, Humans
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