Hearing anatomy
Hearing loss
Sound and
its measurement
Audiologic assessment
Amplification
100

Cerumen is produced in this part of the ear. 

Outer ear

100

The type of hearing loss that is usually caused by otitis media.

Conductive hearing loss

100

The amount of time it takes a wave to complete one cycle.

Period

100

The type of speech stimuli that is mostly used clinically to determine the speech reception threshold.

Spondee words

100

The auditory prostheses for individuals who receive minimal benefit from a hearing aid.

Cochlear implant

200

The tiniest bone in the human body.

Stapes

200

The type of hearing loss that is caused by excessive noise exposure.

Sensorineural hearing loss

200

The perceptual correlate of frequency.

Pitch

200

The type of noise that is used for masking pure tones.

Narrowband noise

200

The part of a hearing aid that converts acoustic signals to electrical signals.

Microphone

300

The structure lies between the stapes and the inner ear.

Oval window

300

The term used to describe the shape or slope of a hearing loss.

Configuration

300

How often a listening check of an audiometer should be performed.

Daily

300

The ear that can hear the stimuli when a bone-conduction vibrator is applied to the right mastoid.

Both ears or better ear

300

The high-pitched whistling sound due to an improperly fitted hearing aid.

Feedback

400

The conductive portion of the auditory pathway.

The outer ear and middle ear

400

The type of hearing loss that shows an exaggeration of true hearing loss.

Nonorganic hearing loss

400

Human hearing range of frequency.

20-20,000 Hz

400

The starting level for air conduction testing according to the ASHA procedure.

30 dB HL

400

The style of hearing aid that is usually used by young children with hearing loss.

Behind-the-ear hearing aid

500

The nerve that sends the signal from the cochlea to the cochlear nucleus.

The 8th cranial nerve (vestibulocochlear nerve)

500

An audiogram showing impaired bone conduction and an air-bone gap.

A mixed hearing loss

500

A sound that contains only one frequency.

Pure tone

500

The usual procedure used for air-conduction threshold determination.

Down 10 dB, up 5 dB

500

“In situ” measurements with a small probe in the ear canal to verify hearing aid fitting.

Real ear measurement

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