This paper addresses the quantitative investigation of the contribution of spontaneous (SOAE) to click-evoked (TEOAE) otoacoustic emissions in newborns. The hypothesis was that a weighted linear combination of the spontaneous peaks is strongly similar to the corresponding click-evoked emissions. After identification of the main spontaneous peaks for each subject, a best fit procedure was applied to find the amplitude and phase of each spontaneous tone in the weighted summation. The comparison of the weighted signal (SpTEOAE) with the actual click-evoked response (TEOAE) from the same subject was performed, obtaining correlation coefficient higher than 50% in more than 100 ears over 132.
Analysis of spontaneous and click-evoked otoacoustic emissions in newborns
Ravazzani P;Tognola G;Grandori F
2001
Abstract
This paper addresses the quantitative investigation of the contribution of spontaneous (SOAE) to click-evoked (TEOAE) otoacoustic emissions in newborns. The hypothesis was that a weighted linear combination of the spontaneous peaks is strongly similar to the corresponding click-evoked emissions. After identification of the main spontaneous peaks for each subject, a best fit procedure was applied to find the amplitude and phase of each spontaneous tone in the weighted summation. The comparison of the weighted signal (SpTEOAE) with the actual click-evoked response (TEOAE) from the same subject was performed, obtaining correlation coefficient higher than 50% in more than 100 ears over 132.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.