Results 161 to 170 of about 14,458 (189)
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Pure Tone Audiometry and Speech Audiometry

2021
Considering the scope of practice of SLTs, as set out by the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists, this chapter provides a general introduction to pure tone audiometry and speech audiometry for clinicians with practical guidance. According to the pure tone audiometry testing procedure recommended by the British Society of Audiology, the ...
Robert Mayr, Fei Zhao
openaire   +2 more sources

Pure tone audiometry in children

International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology, 2005
Our purpose was to evaluate performance of the children on pure tone audiometry (PTA), and role of age, concentration level (CL) and otitis media with effusion (OME) in testing process.This study was prospectively performed on 100 consecutive children referred for PTA between 24 and 120 months of age. After the audiologists' decision on test technique,
Kemaloglu, Yusuf Kemal   +3 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Pure Tone Audiometry with the Mentally Retarded [PDF]

open access: possibleExceptional Children, 1958
This hearing survey was performed at the Kentucky Training Home, Frankfort, Kentucky. The authors wish to express their appreciation to A. M. Lyon, superintendent, L. F. Boland, medical director, and Ashley Mixson, psychologist, for their valuable assistance.
P. Philip Philip   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

Pure-Tone Audiometry in Prenatal Rubella

Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1971
Audiological findings on 94 rubella children with histories of prenatal rubella incurred during the epidemic of 1963 to 1964 are reported. These children represent the first group drawn from a population of over 600 whose hearing could be evaluated by conditioned pure-tone air and bone-conduction tests. A hearing loss of 26 dB or more (ISO 1964) in the
M. M. Cohen   +2 more
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Pure Tone Audiometry in Noise with Auraldomes

International Journal of Audiology, 1975
Pure tone thresholds were obtained using a TDH-39 driver mounted in a standard (MX-41/AR) cushion and an Auraldome (AR-100-R) circumaural enclosure. Thresholds were recorded in quiet and in the presence of broad band sound field noise at 50, 60, and 70 dB SPL.
Aram Glorig, Ross J. Roeser
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Comparison of pure tone thresholds obtained via automated audiometry and standard pure tone audiometry

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2012
It is likely that the role of automated audiometry will expand in both clinical and research settings in the next few years. A novel method for measuring pure tone thresholds using an automated threshold measurement method is reported here. The Automated Audiometry for the NIH Toolbox (AANT) test was developed for use in the NIH Toolbox multi ...
Joseph P. Walton   +3 more
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Pure Tone Audiometry

1955
The results of a test are no better than the competency of the person performing the test. Perfect equipment in the hands of someone untrained, disinterested, or unimaginatively following printed instructions will not produce consistently accurate, worth-while test results.
Morris F. Heller   +2 more
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Quantization Error in Clinical Pure-Tone Audiometry [PDF]

open access: possibleScandinavian Audiology, 1992
The current clinical procedure for pure-tone audiometry was analysed for statistical measurement errors. Theoretically, the root-mean-square (RMS) error in a single threshold measurement is always greater than the standard deviation (SD) of measured intra-individual test-retest differences, divided by the square root of two.
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Pure Tone Audiometry in Older People

British Journal of Audiology, 1975
Hearing loss measured by pure-tone audiometry is described for the better ear, using the median with 95% confidence limits, in seven sound frequencies in a random sample of older people (215 men and 272 women). Both sexes showed increases in hearing loss in each frequency with increasing age. Hearing loss was greater in women at frequencies of 1000 c.p.
I. J. Lauder, J. S. Milne
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Ambient Noise Monitoring during Pure-Tone Audiometry

Journal of the American Academy of Audiology, 2022
Abstract Background There is an increasing need to administer hearing tests outside of sound-attenuating rooms. Maximum permissible ambient noise levels (MPANLs) from published in standards (Occupational Health and Safety Administration [OSHA] 1983; American National Standards Institute [ANSI] S3.1‐1999 (R2018)) can be modified to account for the ...
Robert H, Margolis   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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