Subscribe to RSS
DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1396921
Self-Assessment Questions
Publication History
Publication Date:
30 January 2015 (online)
This section provides a review. Mark each statement on the Answer Sheet according to the factual materials contained in this issue and the opinions of the authors.
Article One (pp. 3–10)
-
The international standard that defines how stimulus levels for acoustic transients should be measured is by which standardization organization?
-
International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
-
International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
-
American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
-
CENELEC
-
-
The international standard that lists the reference equivalent sound pressure levels for acoustic transients was created and published by which standardization organization?
-
ISO
-
IEC
-
ANSI
-
CENELEC
-
-
When determining the level of a transient, which of the following values will be the largest numerically?
-
Slow exponential time-weighted sound level
-
Baseline-to-peak peak equivalent sound pressure level
-
Peak-to-peak peak equivalent sound pressure level
-
Peak sound pressure level
-
-
You measure the peak equivalent sound pressure level, and the baseline to peak sound pressure level is 6 dB less than the peak-to-peak peak-equivalent sound pressure level. How do you explain these results?
-
This is a highly resonant acoustic system.
-
The acoustic system is critically damped.
-
This must be a chirp.
-
This is not possible and must be an error.
-
-
The phenomenon where thresholds increase as stimuli are reduced in duration is known as
-
temporal integration
-
gap detection
-
informational masking
-
Brownian motion
Article Two (pp. 11–28)
-
-
What are the quantities included when we discuss immittance?
-
Admittance and emittance
-
Admittance and impedance
-
Emittance and resistance
-
Susceptance and connectance
-
-
How are power reflectance and absorbance related?
-
Reflectance = 1/absorbance
-
Absorbance = the square of the reflectance
-
Absorbance = 1 − reflectance
-
Reflectance = 1 + absorbance
-
-
Why are tympanograms often done at 226 Hz?
-
February 26 is James Jerger's birthday.
-
There is a simple relationship between admittance and impedance at that frequency.
-
There is a simple relationship between admittance magnitude and equivalent volume at that frequency.
-
It is easy to build sound sources that produce tones at that frequency.
-
-
How can tympanograms at 226 Hz correct for the presence of the ear canal?
-
Pressurization of the ear canal rigidifies the canal walls such that the measured immittance is that of the eardrum.
-
Pressurization of the ear canal rigidifies the eardrum such that the measured immittance is that of the ear canal.
-
At that frequency the impedance of the ear canal is negligible.
-
At that frequency the impedance of the eardrum is negligible.
-
-
Contraction of the stapes muscle may result in
-
a change in aural impedance
-
a change in aural admittance
-
a change in ear canal reflectance
-
a change in ear canal absorbance
-
all of the above
-
none of the above
Article Three (pp. 29–47)
-
-
ANSI standards are typically reaffirmed, revised, or withdrawn every
-
6 months
-
2 years
-
5 years
-
10 years
-
-
The harmonization of standards means
-
several standards sound good together
-
national and international standards are technically equivalent
-
the standards are numbered sequentially
-
standards are incompatible
-
-
The hearing aid standards ANSI S3.22 (2009) and IEC 60118-7 (2005) utilize
-
an artificial mastoid
-
A 2-cm3 coupler
-
a 6-cm3 coupler
-
Knowles electronic manikin for acoustic research (KEMAR)
-
-
A telephone magnetic field simulator fixture simulates
-
a laptop computer magnetic field
-
the magnetic field produced by a telephone handset
-
the magnetic field produced by an artificial mastoid
-
the magnetic field produced by an audiometer
-
-
Which of the following can be used to simulate the effect of the human head and torso for use in testing the performance of hearing aids?
-
KEMAR
-
Kim Kardashian
-
An artificial mastoid
-
An artificial mouth
Article Four (pp. 48–74)
-
-
Video goggles use
-
color cameras
-
black-and-white/infrared-sensitive cameras
-
multimode cameras
-
none of the above
-
-
Water caloric irrigators
-
heat water as it exits the tip
-
uses temperature-controlled water from the faucet
-
heats water and stores it internally
-
cools water to proper temperature
-
-
Flow rate is measured with
-
graduated cylinder
-
anemometer
-
RTD sensor
-
Styrofoam cup
-
-
Calibration angles for videonystagmography
-
depends on distance from patient to target
-
depends on distance target moves from center
-
requires ocular motility
-
all of the above
-
-
Standard infection prevention methods include
-
ensuring clean (decontaminated) surfaces and fluids in the vestibular laboratory
-
using protective barriers to mitigate transmission of infectious agents
-
managing activities to limit the spread of potential pathogens
-
all of the above
-