ETS Praxis Audiology Practice Test

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Which of the following best describes insertion loss?

The decrease in natural amplification of the ear when the external auditory canal is closed off

Insertion loss is the reduction of the ear’s own natural amplification that occurs when the external auditory canal is occluded, such as when a plug or earmold fills the canal. When the canal is open, the ear canal and pinna contribute some amplification through their resonances; blocking the canal reduces that natural amplification, especially at higher frequencies. This is what insertion loss describes. The other options talk about different measurements: the gap between coupler gain and real-ear gain relates to how device measurements compare to standardized conditions, not the ear’s own amplification; variation in signal reaching the hearing aid microphone isn’t about the ear’s natural amplification; and real-ear aided minus real-ear unaided describes the device’s gain (insertion gain) rather than the ear’s loss when occluded.

The difference between coupler gain and real-ear gain

The variation in signal reaching the hearing aid microphone

Real-ear aided response minus real-ear unaided response

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