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Featured researches published by John C. Ellison.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2009

High-frequency click-evoked otoacoustic emissions and behavioral thresholds in humans

Shawn S. Goodman; Denis F. Fitzpatrick; John C. Ellison; Walt Jesteadt; Douglas H. Keefe

Relationships between click-evoked otoacoustic emissions (CEOAEs) and behavioral thresholds have not been explored above 5 kHz due to limitations in CEOAE measurement procedures. New techniques were used to measure behavioral thresholds and CEOAEs up to 16 kHz. A long cylindrical tube of 8 mm diameter, serving as a reflectionless termination, was used to calibrate audiometric stimuli and design a wideband CEOAE stimulus. A second click was presented 15 dB above a probe click level that varied over a 44 dB range, and a nonlinear residual procedure extracted a CEOAE from these click responses. In some subjects (age 14-29 years) with normal hearing up to 8 kHz, CEOAE spectral energy and latency were measured up to 16 kHz. Audiometric thresholds were measured using an adaptive yes-no procedure. Comparison of CEOAE and behavioral thresholds suggested a clinical potential of using CEOAEs to screen for high-frequency hearing loss. CEOAE latencies determined from the peak of averaged, filtered temporal envelopes decreased to 1 ms with increasing frequency up to 16 kHz. Individual CEOAE envelopes included both compressively growing longer-delay components consistent with a coherent-reflection source and linearly or expansively growing shorter-delay components consistent with a distortion source. Envelope delays of both components were approximately invariant with level.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2006

Use of stimulus-frequency otoacoustic emission latency and level to investigate cochlear mechanics in human ears.

Kim S. Schairer; John C. Ellison; Denis F. Fitzpatrick; Douglas H. Keefe

Stimulus frequency otoacoustic emission (SFOAE) sound pressure level (SPL) and latency were measured at probe frequencies from 500 to 4000 Hz and probe levels from 40 to 70 dB SPL in 16 normal-hearing adult ears. The main goal was to use SFOAE latency estimates to better understand possible source mechanisms such as linear coherent reflection, nonlinear distortion, and reverse transmission via the cochlear fluid, and how those sources might change as a function of stimulus level. Another goal was to use SFOAE latencies to noninvasively estimate cochlear tuning. SFOAEs were dominated by the reflection source at low stimulus levels, consistent with previous research, but neither nonlinear distortion nor fluid compression become the dominant source even at the highest stimulus level. At each stimulus level, the SFOAE latency was an approximately constant number of periods from 1000 to 4000 Hz, consistent with cochlear scaling symmetry. SFOAE latency decreased with increasing stimulus level in an approximately frequency-independent manner. Tuning estimates were constant above 1000 Hz, consistent with simultaneous masking data, but in contrast to previous estimates from SFOAEs.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2008

Wideband absorbance tympanometry using pressure sweeps: System development and results on adults with normal hearing

Yi-Wen Liu; Chris A. Sanford; John C. Ellison; Denis F. Fitzpatrick; Michael P. Gorga; Douglas H. Keefe

A system with potential for middle-ear screening and diagnostic testing was developed for the measurement of wideband energy absorbance (EA) in the ear canal as a function of air pressure, and tested on adults with normal hearing. Using a click stimulus, the EA was measured at 60 frequencies between 0.226 and 8 kHz. Ambient-pressure results were similar to past studies. To perform tympanometry, air pressure in the ear canal was controlled automatically to sweep between -300 and 200 daPa (ascending/descending directions) using sweep speeds of approximately 75, 100, 200, and 400 daPas. Thus, the measurement time for wideband tympanometry ranged from 1.5 to 7 s and was suitable for clinical applications. A bandpass tympanogram, calculated for each ear by frequency averaging EA from 0.38 to 2 kHz, had a single-peak shape; however, its tympanometric peak pressure (TPP) shifted as a function of sweep speed and direction. EA estimated at the TPP was similar across different sweep speeds, but was higher below 2 kHz than EA measured at ambient pressure. Future studies of EA on normal ears of a different age group or on impaired ears may be compared with the adult normal baseline obtained in this study.


Ear and Hearing | 2005

Audiometric predictions using stimulus-frequency otoacoustic emissions and middle ear measurements

John C. Ellison; Douglas H. Keefe

Objective: The goals of the study are to determine how well stimulus-frequency otoacoustic emissions (SFOAEs) identify hearing loss, classify hearing loss as mild or moderate-severe, and correlate with pure-tone thresholds in a population of adults with normal middle ear function. Other goals are to determine if middle ear function as assessed by wideband acoustic transfer function (ATF) measurements in the ear canal account for the variability in normal thresholds, and if the inclusion of ATFs improves the ability of SFOAEs to identify hearing loss and predict pure-tone thresholds. Design: The total suppressed SFOAE signal and its corresponding noise were recorded in 85 ears (22 normal ears and 63 ears with sensorineural hearing loss) at octave frequencies from 0.5 to 8 kHz, using a nonlinear residual method. SFOAEs were recorded a second time in three impaired ears to assess repeatability. Ambient-pressure ATFs were obtained in all but one of these 85 ears and were also obtained from an additional 31 normal-hearing subjects in whom SFOAE data were not obtained. Pure-tone air and bone conduction thresholds and 226-Hz tympanograms were obtained on all subjects. Normal tympanometry and the absence of air-bone gaps were used to screen subjects for normal middle ear function. Clinical decision theory was used to assess the performance of SFOAE and ATF predictors in classifying ears as normal or impaired, and linear regression analysis was used to test the ability of SFOAE and ATF variables to predict the air conduction audiogram. Results: The ability of SFOAEs to classify ears as normal or hearing impaired was significant at all test frequencies. The ability of SFOAEs to classify impaired ears as either mild or moderate-severe was significant at test frequencies from 0.5 to 4 kHz. SFOAEs were present in cases of severe hearing loss. SFOAEs were also significantly correlated with air conduction thresholds from 0.5 to 8 kHz. The best performance occurred with the use of the SFOAE signal-to-noise ratio as the predictor, and the overall best performance was at 2 kHz. The SFOAE signal-to-noise measures were repeatable to within 3.5 dB in impaired ears. The ATF measures explained up to 25% of the variance in the normal audiogram; however, ATF measures did not improve SFOAEs predictors of hearing loss except at 4 kHz. Conclusions: In common with other OAE types, SFOAEs are capable of identifying the presence of hearing loss. In particular, SFOAEs performed better than distortion-product and click-evoked OAEs in predicting auditory status at 0.5 kHz; SFOAE performance was similar to that of other OAE types at higher frequencies except for a slight performance reduction at 4 kHz. Because SFOAEs were detected in ears with mild to severe cases of hearing loss, they may also provide an estimate of the classification of hearing loss. Although SFOAEs were significantly correlated with hearing threshold, they do not appear to have clinical utility in predicting a specific behavioral threshold. Information on middle ear status as assessed by ATF measures offered minimal improvement in SFOAE predictions of auditory status in a population of normal and impaired ears with normal middle ear function. However, ATF variables did explain a significant fraction of the variability in the audiograms of normal ears, suggesting that audiometric thresholds in normal ears are partially constrained by middle ear function as assessed by ATF tests.


Laryngoscope | 2012

Wideband acoustic transfer functions predict middle-ear effusion

John C. Ellison; Michael P. Gorga; Edward S. Cohn; Denis F. Fitzpatrick; Chris A. Sanford; Douglas H. Keefe

Compare the accuracy of wideband acoustic transfer functions (WATFs) measured in the ear canal at ambient pressure to methods currently recommended by clinical guidelines for predicting middle‐ear effusion (MEE).


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2011

Detecting high-frequency hearing loss with click-evoked otoacoustic emissions

Douglas H. Keefe; Shawn S. Goodman; John C. Ellison; Denis F. Fitzpatrick; Michael P. Gorga

In contrast to clinical click-evoked otoacoustic emission (CEOAE) tests that are inaccurate above 4-5 kHz, a research procedure measured CEOAEs up to 16 kHz in 446 ears and predicted the presence/absence of a sensorineural hearing loss. The behavioral threshold test that served as a reference to evaluate CEOAE test accuracy used a yes-no task in a maximum-likelihood adaptive procedure. This test was highly efficient between 0.5 and 12.7 kHz: Thresholds measured in 2 min per frequency had a median standard deviation (SD) of 1.2-1.5 dB across subjects. CEOAE test performance was assessed by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). The mean AUC from 1 to 10 kHz was 0.90 (SD=0.016). AUC decreased to 0.86 at 12.7 kHz and to 0.7 at 0.5 and 16 kHz, possibly due in part to insufficient stimulus levels. Between 1 and 12.7 kHz, the medians of the magnitude difference in CEOAEs and in behavioral thresholds were <4 dB. The improved CEOAE test performance above 4-5 kHz was due to retaining the portion of the CEOAE response with latencies as short as 0.3 ms. Results have potential clinical significance in predicting hearing status from at least 1 to 10 kHz using a single CEOAE response.


International Journal of Audiology | 2012

Wideband aural acoustic absorbance predicts conductive hearing loss in children

Douglas H. Keefe; Chris A. Sanford; John C. Ellison; Denis F. Fitzpatrick; Michael P. Gorga

Abstract Objective: This study tested the hypothesis that wideband aural absorbance predicts conductive hearing loss (CHL) in children medically classified as having otitis media with effusion. Design: Absorbance was measured in the ear canal over frequencies from 0.25 to 8 kHz at ambient pressure or as a swept tympanogram. CHL was defined using criterion air-bone gaps of 20, 25, and 30 dB at octaves from 0.25 to 4 kHz. A likelihood-ratio predictor of CHL was constructed across frequency for ambient absorbance, and across frequency and pressure for absorbance tympanometry. Performance was evaluated at individual frequencies and for any frequency at which a CHL was present. Study sample: Absorbance and conventional 0.226-kHz tympanograms were measured in children of age three to eight years with CHL and with normal hearing. Results: Absorbance was smaller at frequencies above 0.7 kHz in the CHL group than the control group. Based on the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, wideband absorbance in ambient and tympanometric tests were significantly better predictors of CHL than tympanometric width, the best 0.226-kHz predictor. Accuracies of ambient and tympanometric wideband absorbance did not differ. Conclusions: Absorbance accurately predicted CHL in children and was more accurate than conventional 0.226-kHz tympanometry.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2007

Wideband ipsilateral measurements of middle-ear muscle reflex thresholds in children and adults.

Kim S. Schairer; John C. Ellison; Denis F. Fitzpatrick; Douglas H. Keefe

The goals of the current study were to: 1) evaluate the feasibility of a new wideband approach to measuring middle-ear muscle reflex (MEMR) status, and 2) to test the hypothesis that ipsilateral thresholds elicited with 1 or 2 kHz tones and broadband noise activators on a wideband acoustic transfer function (WATF) system are lower than thresholds elicited on a clinical system. Clinical MEMR tests have limitations, including the need for high activator levels to elicit a shift in a narrowband probe (e.g., a 0.226 or 1 kHz tone). Wideband MEMR tests using WATFs may elicit the reflex at lower levels because a wideband probe (click) is used and the threshold detection criterion can be wideband. Mean wideband MEMR thresholds across 40 normal-hearing adult ears were 2.2-4.0 dB lower than clinical MEMR thresholds, depending on the activator and specific WATF test used (admittance magnitude or energy reflectance). Wideband MEMR has potential clinical utility beyond the adult population, including use in newborn and preschool hearing screenings. In a newborn hearing screening, for example, wideband MEMR could be completed with the same system as otoacoustic emissions. However, further investigations in infants and young children are needed.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2009

The effectiveness of multiple harmonics in eliciting the precedence effect in normal‐hearing listeners.

John C. Ellison; Jonas Braasch

Localization dominance due to the precedence effect refers to the ability of listeners to localize a primary auditory event in the presence of reflected sound. It has been shown that localization dominance becomes more stable as the bandwidth of a noise burst increases, which suggests the role of cross‐frequency interactions on localization dominance. Currently, little is known about how stimuli containing multiple harmonics influence localization dominance. The present investigation uses a multiple harmonic complex to investigate localization dominance due to the precedence effect. Listeners locate the perceived lateral position of stimuli presented binaurally via headphones by adjusting the interaural‐level difference (ILD) that approximates the location of the stimulus. Stimuli are presented as lead and lag signals that simulate direct and reflected sound, respectively. The interstimulus interval (ISI) is varied from 0 to 4 ms, and the phase of the harmonic complex is varied between ears. For both the ...


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2008

Two‐tone suppression of stimulus frequency otoacoustic emissions in human ears with sensorineural hearing loss

Douglas H. Keefe; John C. Ellison; Denis F. Fitzpatrick

Two‐tone suppression (2TS) of stimulus frequency otoacoustic emissions (SFOAEs) recorded in normal‐functioning human ears is a noninvasive measure of cochlear nonlinearity. This study investigates 2TS SFOAE response properties in 63 subjects with sensorineural hearing loss and normal middle‐ear function. SFOAEs were measured using tones at frequencies (fp) from 0.5 to 8 kHz and levels from 40‐60 dB SPL. For interpreting SFOAEs, hearing status was classified at each frequency according to degree of hearing loss, with losses ranging from within normal limits to 95 dB HL. SFOAE suppression was measured as a function of suppressor frequency (fs) and level (Ls), with results analyzed in terms of a SFOAE suppression tuning curve. A tip‐to‐tail difference (TTD) was defined between the Ls needed to produce a criterion decrement in SFOAE level at fs one octave below fp and the Ls needed to produce a criterion decrement near fp. The TTD estimates cochlear‐amplifier gain in normal‐functioning ears, but its propertie...

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Kim S. Schairer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jonas Braasch

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Yi-Wen Liu

National Tsing Hua University

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