1990
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4757-4341-8_33
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Measurement of the Middle Ear Transfer Function in Cat, Chinchilla and Guinea Pig

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Cited by 24 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Simulations show that an intermixture of just 3 nL/s (i.e., ∼3 nL with every respiratory-induced pressure pulsation) was sufficient to account for the loss. This amount seems reasonable based on estimates of RW compliance in the guinea pig estimated to be 0.14 nL/Pa (Décory et al 1990;Wit et al 2003). Considering that respiratory fluctuations are around 0.3 mmHg (∼40 Pa) (Böhmer 1993), each respiratory cycle is calculated to result in a volume displacement of approximately 5.6 nL.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Simulations show that an intermixture of just 3 nL/s (i.e., ∼3 nL with every respiratory-induced pressure pulsation) was sufficient to account for the loss. This amount seems reasonable based on estimates of RW compliance in the guinea pig estimated to be 0.14 nL/Pa (Décory et al 1990;Wit et al 2003). Considering that respiratory fluctuations are around 0.3 mmHg (∼40 Pa) (Böhmer 1993), each respiratory cycle is calculated to result in a volume displacement of approximately 5.6 nL.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Middle-ear pressure gains have been measured in chinchilla by Décory et al (1990), Ravicz et al (2010), Slama et al (2010), andRosowski (2013a). Interestingly, the G ME magnitude curve reported by (Ravicz and Rosowski 2013a), shown in Figure 6 (brown trace), has a high-frequency cutoff close to that of the present stapes-velocity magnitudes (red trace) and also substantially higher than the corresponding stapes-velocity measurements made by the same authors (blue trace (Ravicz and Rosowski 2013b); magenta trace ).…”
Section: Middle-ear Pressure Gainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other authors have discussed the phenomenon of basilar membrane movement resulting from animal experiments with the Mössbauer technique [6], capacitive probe [7] and AEP technique [8]. Among these are examinations involving measurement of the mechanoelectrical transfer function between the auditory canal and the potential measurement electrode [9][10][11]. The pressure measurements in both perilymphatic scales by Franke and Dancer [12] and later by Décory et al [10] complement the data.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 67%