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Auditory Steady State Response (ASSR)
The brain activity is recorded using electrodes taped on the forehead and behind each ear. The use of electrodes eliminates the need for active participation of the patient (i.e., pushing a response button every time a tone is activated). The results are detected objectively using statistical formulas that determine the presence or absence of a true response. Similar to traditional audiometric testing, threshold is determined as the lowest level at each frequency at which a response is present. ASSR provides an accurate, frequency-specific estimate of the behavioral pure-tone audiogram. The use of ASSR in estimating hearing loss in children was the subject of a recent study by Audiologists at California Ear Institute. The article “Estimation of Hearing Loss in Children: Comparison of Auditory Steady-State Response, Auditory Brainstem Response, and Behavioral Test Methods” was published in the American Journal of Audiology in December 2003. Locations
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