Slow Evoked Cortical Responses to Linear Frequency Ramps of a Continuous Pure Tone

Abstract
Arlinger, S. D., L. B. Jerlvall, T. Ahrén and E. C. Holmgren. Slow evoked cortical responses to linear frequency ramps of a continuous pure tone. Acta physiol. scand. 1976. 98. 412–424.Slow evoked cortical potentials from ten young normal‐hearing subjects have been recorded as responses to linear frequency ramps of a continuous pure tone. Frequency changes from 10 to 500 Hz were studied; the rate of frequency change was varied from 0.02 to 50 kHz/s while the duration of the change was varied from 10 to 500 ms. The rate of frequency change was shown to have the greatest bearing on the responses except for frequency ramp durations below 50 ms and frequency changes below 50 Hz. The base frequencies (250–4000 Hz) and sound levels (20–80 dB HL) exerted an influence on the evoked responses that was qualitatively similar to their influence on behavioral thresholds. The direction of the frequency sweep had no significant influence on the evoked responses. A functional model is proposed in which the time derivate of the signal frequency is integrated with an adaptable integration time that is controlled by the rate of the frequency change.

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