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  2. Pure-tone audiometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pure-tone_audiometry

    Pure-tone audiometry is the main hearing test used to identify hearing threshold levels of an individual, enabling determination of the degree, type and configuration of a hearing loss [1] [2] and thus providing a basis for diagnosis and management.

  3. Audiogram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audiogram

    Audiogram. An audiogram is a graph that shows the audible threshold for standardized frequencies as measured by an audiometer.The Y axis represents intensity measured in decibels (dB) and the X axis represents frequency measured in hertz (Hz). [1]

  4. Audiometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audiometry

    In 1899, Carl E. Seashore Prof. of Psychology at U. Iowa, United States, introduced the audiometer as an instrument to measure the "keenness of hearing" whether in the laboratory, schoolroom, or office of the psychologist or aurist. The instrument operated on a battery and presented a tone or a click; it had an attenuator set in a scale of 40 ...

  5. Sound level meter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_level_meter

    However, the reading from a sound level meter does not correlate well to human-perceived loudness, which is better measured by a loudness meter. Specific loudness is a compressive nonlinearity and varies at certain levels and at certain frequencies. These metrics can also be calculated in a number of different ways. [4] [example needed]

  6. Hearing test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hearing_test

    A hearing test provides an evaluation of the sensitivity of a person's sense of hearing and is most often performed by an audiologist using an audiometer. An audiometer is used to determine a person's hearing sensitivity at different frequencies. There are other hearing tests as well, e.g., Weber test and Rinne test.

  7. Chinese humanoid robot lands world's first front flip - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/chinese-humanoid-robot-lands...

    A robotics firm in China claims a robot has performed the world's first humanoid robot front flip, which is significantly more difficult than a backflip.

  8. Minimum audibility curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimum_audibility_curve

    Minimum audibility curve is a standardized graph of the threshold of hearing frequency for an average human, and is used as the reference level when measuring hearing loss with an audiometer as shown on an audiogram.

  9. Noise dosimeter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_dosimeter

    Personal noise dosimeters. A noise dosimeter (American English) or noise dosemeter (British English) is a specialized sound level meter intended specifically to measure the noise exposure of a person integrated over a period of time.