The primary tone phase variation (PTPV) technique combines selective sub-averaging with systematic variation of the phases of multitone stimuli. Each response component having a known phase relationship with the stimulus components phases can be isolated in the time domain. The method was generalized to the frequency-following response (FFR) evoked by a two-tone (f1 and f2) stimulus comprising both linear and non-linear, as well as transient components. The generalized PTPV technique isolated each spectral component present in the FFR, including those sharing the same frequency, allowing comparison of their latencies. After isolation of the envelope component f2 - f1 from its harmonic distortion 2f2 - 2f1 and from the transient auditory bra...
Despite the structural differences of the middle and inner ears, the latency pattern in auditory ner...
Auditory evoked responses (AEPs) during sleep indicate the degree of activation and responsiveness o...
Abstract: Frequency following responses (FFRs) can be evoked by a wide range of stimuli. As a result...
International audienceThe primary tone phase variation (PTPV) technique combines selective sub-avera...
The variety of electrophysiological tests currently available allows objective audiograms to be reli...
The frequency following response (FFR) is a scalp-recorded measure of phase-locked brainstem activit...
The principle of stationary phase (PSP) is re-examined in the context of linear time-frequency (TF) ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Multiple Auditory Steady-State Response (MASTER) techniq...
Frequency following responses (FFRs) are auditory potentials that have the same periodicity as the e...
Objective: The frequency-following response (FFR) is a neurophonic potential used to assess auditory...
Auditory nerve single-unit population studies have demonstrated that phase-locking plays a dominant ...
The frequency following potential (FFP) is an auditory evoked response which crudely replicates the ...
The scalp-recorded frequency-following response (FFR) is a measure of the auditory nervous system's ...
We present a model for tone-in-noise detection at low frequencies that includes a physiologically re...
The frequency following response (FFR) is a scalp-recorded measure of phase-locked brainstem activit...
Despite the structural differences of the middle and inner ears, the latency pattern in auditory ner...
Auditory evoked responses (AEPs) during sleep indicate the degree of activation and responsiveness o...
Abstract: Frequency following responses (FFRs) can be evoked by a wide range of stimuli. As a result...
International audienceThe primary tone phase variation (PTPV) technique combines selective sub-avera...
The variety of electrophysiological tests currently available allows objective audiograms to be reli...
The frequency following response (FFR) is a scalp-recorded measure of phase-locked brainstem activit...
The principle of stationary phase (PSP) is re-examined in the context of linear time-frequency (TF) ...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Multiple Auditory Steady-State Response (MASTER) techniq...
Frequency following responses (FFRs) are auditory potentials that have the same periodicity as the e...
Objective: The frequency-following response (FFR) is a neurophonic potential used to assess auditory...
Auditory nerve single-unit population studies have demonstrated that phase-locking plays a dominant ...
The frequency following potential (FFP) is an auditory evoked response which crudely replicates the ...
The scalp-recorded frequency-following response (FFR) is a measure of the auditory nervous system's ...
We present a model for tone-in-noise detection at low frequencies that includes a physiologically re...
The frequency following response (FFR) is a scalp-recorded measure of phase-locked brainstem activit...
Despite the structural differences of the middle and inner ears, the latency pattern in auditory ner...
Auditory evoked responses (AEPs) during sleep indicate the degree of activation and responsiveness o...
Abstract: Frequency following responses (FFRs) can be evoked by a wide range of stimuli. As a result...