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Audiometric tests
Audiometric tests
The testing of hearing with an audiometer, whereby hearing impairments can be measured.
SIMILAR TERMS--------------------------------------
Audiogram A test of hearing at a range of sound frequencies.
Audiologist A health care professional who is trained to evaluate hearing loss and related disorders, including balance (vestibular) disorders and tinnitus (ringing in the ears) and to rehabilitate individuals with hearing loss and related disorders. An audiologist uses a variety of tests and procedures to assess hearing and balance function and to fit and dispense hearing aids and other assistive devices for hearing.
Audiology The study and testing of hearing, and the provision of hearing aids.
Audiometry The measurement of hearing.
Audit (of a clinical trial) A systematic and independent examination of trial-related activities and documents to determine whether the evaluated trial-related activities were conducted, and the data were recorded, analysed and accurately reported according to the protocol, standard operating procedures (SOPs), good clinical practice (GCP), and the applicable regulatory requirements.
Audit certificate Document that certifies that an audit has taken place at a site undertaking clinical research.
Audit trial Documentation that allows reconstruction of the course of events.
Auditory acuity The clarity or clearness of hearing, a measure of how well a person hears. Auditory acuity is what is measured when determining the need for a hearing aide and monitoring the ability to hear.
Auditory aphasia Impairment in the understanding of auditory language and communication. Sounds are heard but they convey no meaning. The 20th century Russian composer Vissarion Shebalin had auditory aphasia after a stroke but remained an outstanding composer. The comprehension of auditory language and the musical organization of acoustic perception rely on different systems in the brain. Auditory aphasia is also known as acoustic aphasia and word deafness.
Auditory brainstem response test See: ABR test.
Auditory cortex The part of the brain that is concerned with hearing. The auditory cortex is the temporal lobe, which the lower lobe of the cerebral hemisphere just forward of the occipital lobe.
Auditory disease, central "A condition in which there is an inability to differentiate, recognize or understand sounds while both the hearing and intelligence are normal. The problem is ""central"" as regards the auditory pathways. (In technical terms, a central auditory processing disorder is a disease of the auditory pathways from the bulbar cochlear nuclei to the auditory cortex in the temporal lobe. Structures involved in such a disorder may include the medial and lateral lemnisci, inferior colliculus, and the medial geniculate nucleus.)"
Auditory hallucination A hallucination involving the perception of sound, most commonly of voices. Some clinicians and investigators would not include those experiences perceived as coming from inside the head and would instead limit the concept of true auditory hallucinations to those sounds whose source is perceived as being external.
Auditory integration training An experimental procedure for reducing painful hypersensitivity to sound. It has proved beneficial for some people with autism and other neuropsychiatric disorders.
Auditory perception The ability to identify, interpret, and attach meaning to sound.
Auditory prosthesis A device that enhances the ability to hear or substitutes for it. More commonly called a hearing aid. See: Hearing aid.
Auditory tube The tube that runs from the middle ear to the pharynx, also known as the Eustachian tube.
PREVIOUS AND NEXT TERMS--------------------------------------
Allergy testing Tests (often skin tests) to determine a person?s reaction to some foreign substances that are normally harmless, but that produce reaction in some individuals.
Audiology The study and testing of hearing, and the provision of hearing aids.
Audiometric tests
Activities of daily living (ADL) The basic elements of personal care such as eating, washing and showering, grooming, walking, standing up from a chair and using the toilet. Instrumental ADL (IADLs) activities extend to non-personal care items
Admission criteria Basis for selecting from the target population for a clinical trial. Subjects must be screened to ensure that their characteristics match a list of inclusion criteria and that none of their characteristics match any single one of the exclusion criteria set up for the study
Adverse event (AE) Any untoward medical occurrence in a patient or clinical investigation subject administered a pharmaceutical product and which does not necessarily have a causal relationship with this treatment. An adverse event (AE) can therefore be any unfavourable and unintended sign (including an abnormal laboratory finding), symptom, or disease temporally associated with the use of a medicinal (investigational) product, whether or not related to the medicinal (investigational) product. See also serious adverse event.
Algorithm "Step-by-step procedure for solving a mathematical problem; also used to describe step-by-step procedures for making a series of choices among alternative decisions to reach an outcome."
Alpha error (statistics) See Type 1 error.
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