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Mammalian hearing relies upon active cochlear mechanics to amplify acoustic stimulations increasing hearing sensitivity and frequency selectivity.
While we only observed a slight, albeit statistically significant, trend toward poorer gap detection with increasing hearing loss in these data, with a considerable degree of variability, hearing loss is clearly a variable requiring consideration.
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Bats, for one, do something similar: they use muscles in their ears to increase hearing sensitivity over time.
Already some research has suggested that hormones may cause the increased hearing sensitivity that some women report during parts of the menstrual cycle.
We keep adding devices that pipe music directly into our ears into our technological arsenals, but they don't seem to increase hearing loss rates.
This simple model is appealing since it tends to synchronize ion channel gate openings and thus increase hearing sensitivity.
The Weberian apparatus of otophysine fishes facilitates sound transmission from the swimbladder to the inner ear to increase hearing sensitivity.
To compensate for increased hearing thresholds in the plugged ear, intensity levels were raised for ASR testing.
These monkeys showed also increased hearing threshold and reduced orientation to sounds, modality specific impairments similar to those reported in autistic infants [11], [12], [13], [14], [15].
After acoustic or ototoxic insult, birds initially have increased hearing thresholds, which eventually return nearly to baseline confirming that newly produced hair cells are functional [20].
Outer hair cell (OHC) or prestin-based electromotility is an active cochlear amplifier in the mammalian inner ear that can increase hearing sensitivity and frequency selectivity.
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