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October 2007
Basics of Audiology
From Vibrations to Sounds
Jerry L. Cranford, Ph.D., M.C.D., C.C.C.-A.
Softcover. 7 x 10".
ISBN10: 1-59756-180-0. ISBN13: 978-1-59756-180-8
US$45.00 CAN$51.00 £29.00 AU$70.00
TEXTBOOK
Instructors: click here to request your 90 day examination copy of this book.
ABOUT THE BOOK
This book was developed from Dr. Cranford’s extensive experience teaching audiology to speechlanguage pathology students. Although there are multiple, established introductory texts in audiology, this text is uniquely geared to students who certainly are studying Speech-Language Pathology. This text includes all the necessary audiological principles needed for any SLP student to become competent in test assessment and the diagnosis of hearing disorders. Mastery of this text will enable the future clinician practice in a wider patient base.
In addition to being useful in undergraduate training programs as a primary or supplementary text, the book will also be valuable for SLPs who have “been in the trenches” for a number of years and feel they need to have their knowledge of audiology refreshed or updated. Because the author has focused on using nontechnical or layman’s terminology in explaining the various scientific and clinical concepts/principles in this field, he also believes that parents, relatives, or significant others of hearing impaired patients will also find this book useful for understanding the problems experienced by their loved ones.
CONTENTS
- Preface
PART I. THE SCIENTIFIC BACKGROUND FOR AUDIOLOGY
- Physics of Sound or Acoustics
- Functional Anatomy of the Auditory Nervous System
- Contributions from the Psychoacoustics Laboratory
PART II. WHAT AUDIOLOGISTS DO AND WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
- Intake History and Otoscopic Examination of the
Patient’s Ear Canal and Eardrum
- Pure Tone Air and Bone Conduction Audiometry—
How to Interpret the Patient’s Audiogram
- Speech Audiometry: What It Can and Cannot Reveal
about Peripheral versus Central Auditory Function
- What Are Acoustic Reflexes and What Do They
Reveal about the Patient’s Auditory Functions
- Tympanometry and Tympanograms: What They
Reveal about the Patient’s Middle Ear and
Hearing Status
- Electrocochleography and Brainstem Auditory
Evoked Potential Tests and What They Reveal
about Auditory Functions
- Otoacoustic Emissions: The Latest Computerized
Tool for Assessing Peripheral Hearing and Neural
Function
- Common Forms of Behavioral Assessments Used by
Audiologists to Assess Central Auditory Function
- Recent Advances in Electrophysiology Measurement
Tools for Assessing Central Auditory Nervous
System Problems
- Use of Medical Neuroimaging Techniques to
Assist in Evaluating CANS Problems in Patients
- Index
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jerry L. Cranford, PhD, MCD, CCC-A, Professor of Audiology/Hearing Science, Department of Communication Disorders and Sciences, Louisiana State University Health Services Center, School of Allied Health Professions.
AUDIENCE
Primary: Audiology
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