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Rapid Assessment of Sound-evoked Olivocochlear Feedback: Suppression of Compound Action Potentials by Contralateral Sound

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Journal Hear Res
Date 1989 Mar 1
PMID 2708159
Citations 28
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Abstract

The compound action potential (CAP) measured at the round window of anesthetized cats in response to low-level tone pips can be significantly suppressed by addition of tones or noise to the opposite ear. This contralateral-sound suppression disappears upon transection of the olivocochlear bundle. The frequency and level dependence of the suppression phenomenon are well explained by known sound-evoked discharge properties of single olivocochlear neurons. Thus, the contralateral-sound suppression of cochlear CAP should prove useful as a rapid measure of the magnitude of the sound-evoked efferent feedback to the cochlea.

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