Publications by authors named "Daniel D Gehr"

Audiograms have indicated greater auditory sensitivity in larger than in smaller geckos; part of this difference, interspecifically and intraspecifically, is explained by middle-ear proportions. To investigate the contribution of the inner ear to the variation in sensitivity, we examined it in museum specimens representing 11 species and three subfamilies. We measured papilla basilaris length, and, when intact, the saccular otoconial mass.

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Input/output functions of distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAE I/O-functions) give an insight into the compressive, non-linear sound processing of the cochlea. With an inner ear dysfunction a steeper I/O-function is observed. Due to the linear sound processing of the middle ear, one can assume that the DPOAE growth behaviour remains unaltered with a sound conduction dysfunction.

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A special stimulus paradigm needs to be applied when distortion product otoacoustic emission (DPOAE) input/output functions are used to investigate the loss of sensitivity and loss of compression of outer hair cell cochlear amplifiers during noise exposure, drug treatment, etc. This stimulus paradigm should be able to reflect cochlear non-linear compressive sound processing known from direct basilar membrane measurements. Such a paradigm has already been established for humans that accounts for the different compression of the primary tones at the DPOAE generation site at f2 with L1 = 0.

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