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Intracranial lateralization bias observed in the presence of symmetrical hearing thresholds.

Matthew J GoupellVirginia BestH Steven Colburn
Published in: JASA express letters (2021)
It is generally assumed that listeners with normal audiograms have relatively symmetric hearing, and more specifically that diotic stimuli (having zero interaural differences) are heard as centered in the head. While measuring intracranial lateralization with a visual pointing task for tones and 50-Hz-wide narrowband noises from 300 to 700 Hz, examples of systematic and large (>50% from midline to the ear) lateralization biases were found. In a group of ten listeners, five showed consistent lateralization bias to the right or left side at all or a subset of frequencies. Asymmetries in hearing, not apparent in audiometric thresholds, may explain these lateralization biases.
Keyphrases
  • optic nerve
  • hearing loss