Air-Radiated Sound from Bone Vibration Transducers and Its Implications for Bone Conduction Audiometry
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in British Journal of Audiology
- Vol. 14 (3) , 86-99
- https://doi.org/10.3109/03005368009078908
Abstract
The effect of air-borne sound radiated from transducers used in bone conduction audiometry has been known for many years. This paper seeks to quantify this effect for the vibrator types (B70A, B71, and B72. Using three examples of each vibrator sound pressure levels were measured at the entrance to the external ear canal on four human heads. Values obtained have been related to hearing threshold levels for otologically normal young persons using two different methods: firstly using international standard values of open-ear free-field threshold with corrections for monaural listening and for diffraction, and secondly by direct measurement of the subjects’ monaural open-ear thresholds. None of the vibrators tested meets international standard requirements for air-borne sound radiation at all frequencies, but in practice, provided a high quality ear plug is fitted to the test ear at 3 and 4 kHz large errors are unlikely to be recorded for any of the vibrator types tested.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Brief Communication on Bone Conduction ArtefactsBritish Journal of Audiology, 1980
- Air-Borne Radiation from Bone Conduction TransducersBritish Journal of Audiology, 1979
- Clinical Implications in Calibration Requirements in Bone Conduction StandardisationInternational Journal of Audiology, 1979
- Monitoring sound pressures within the ear: Application to noise exposureThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1977