Using the auditory steady-state response to assess temporal dynamics of hearing sensitivity during bottlenose dolphin echolocation

  • Finneran J
  • Mulsow J
  • Houser D
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Abstract

The auditory steady-state response (ASSR) to an external tone was measured in an echolocating dolphin to determine if hearing sensitivity changes could be tracked over time scales corresponding to single click-echo pairs. Individual epochs containing click-echo pairs were first extracted from the instantaneous electroencephalogram. Epochs were coherently averaged using the external tone modulation rate as a timing reference, then Fourier transformed using a sliding, 10-ms temporal window to obtain the ASSR amplitude as a function of time. The results revealed a decrease in the ASSR amplitude at the time of click emission, followed by a 25–70 ms recovery.

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Finneran, J. J., Mulsow, J., & Houser, D. S. (2013). Using the auditory steady-state response to assess temporal dynamics of hearing sensitivity during bottlenose dolphin echolocation. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 134(5), 3913–3917. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4823842

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