Pure-Tone Audiometry
Cross-source consensus on Pure-Tone Audiometry from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Pure-tone audiometry is the most common way to evaluate auditory function. — Developing the Hungarian version of the MATCH test from the original German language: an evidence-based protocol for the translation, cultural adaptation and validation of paediatric speech audiometry tests from one language into another
- Pure-tone audiometry measures peripheral hearing sensitivity rather than spoken-language processing. — Developing the Hungarian version of the MATCH test from the original German language: an evidence-based protocol for the translation, cultural adaptation and validation of paediatric speech audiometry tests from one language into another
- Pure-tone audiometry has important limitations in young children. — Developing the Hungarian version of the MATCH test from the original German language: an evidence-based protocol for the translation, cultural adaptation and validation of paediatric speech audiometry tests from one language into another
- The validation phase compares MATCH speech recognition thresholds against PTA thresholds in children with and without hearing loss. — Developing the Hungarian version of the MATCH test from the original German language: an evidence-based protocol for the translation, cultural adaptation and validation of paediatric speech audiometry tests from one language into another