2018
DOI: 10.1101/354902
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Auditory attention reduced ear-canal noise in humans, but not through medial olivocochlear efferent inhibition: Implications for measuring otoacoustic emissions during behavioral task performance

Abstract: 22Otoacoustic emissions (OAEs) are often measured to non-invasively determine activation of medial 23 olivocochlear (MOC) efferents in humans. Usually these experiments assume that ear-canal noise 24 remains constant. However, changes in ear-canal noise have been reported in some behavioral 25 experiments. We studied the variability of ear-canal noise in eight subjects who performed a two-26interval-forced-choice (2IFC) sound-level-discrimination task on monaural tone pips in masking 27 noise. Ear-canal noise … Show more

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“…An increasing number of studies support this notion by measuring otoacoustic emissions (OAE; [11][12][13]) or cochlear microphonics [14]. However, the described effects are restricted to sound-evoked responses, are small, and sometimes contradictory [15,16]. Furthermore, the attention research on cortical and cochlear processes has been conducted largely independently (see [13,17,18] for exceptions).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An increasing number of studies support this notion by measuring otoacoustic emissions (OAE; [11][12][13]) or cochlear microphonics [14]. However, the described effects are restricted to sound-evoked responses, are small, and sometimes contradictory [15,16]. Furthermore, the attention research on cortical and cochlear processes has been conducted largely independently (see [13,17,18] for exceptions).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An increasing number of studies support this notion by measuring otoacoustic emissions (OAE; Smith, Aouad, & Keil, 2012;Walsh, Pasanen, & McFadden, 2015;Wittekindt, Kaiser, & Abel, 2014) or cochlear microphonics (Delano et al, 2007). However, the described effects are restricted to soundevoked responses, are small, and sometimes contradictory (Francis et al, 2018;Meric & Collet, 1992). Furthermore, the attention research on cortical and cochlear processes has been conducted largely independently (see Wittekindt et al (2014), Dragicevic et al (2019), or Riecke et al (2020) for exceptions).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%