Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8942073 | Applied Acoustics | 2018 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Scanning laser Doppler vibrometry (LDV) has been used extensively to investigate the movement of the middle and inner ear, but has never been used to measure vibrations from a bone transducer travelling over the skin, subcutaneous tissue and cranium in a live subject. Using three scanning laser Doppler vibrometers we measured the displacement of the cranium in 3D in a live subject when stimulated by a B71 bone transducer placed 55 mm posterior to the external auditory canal. Four pure tones (250â¯Hz, 500â¯Hz, 1000â¯Hz, 2000â¯Hz) were presented separately via the bone transducer. The displacement of the scalp was imaged in four different areas (Ipsilateral to the bone transducer in the temporoparietal region, contralateral temporoparietal region, occipital region and vertex) and linked to the phase of stimulation. Measured scalp motion was consistent with expected displacement of the underlying cranium. Rigid-body motion was the dominant mode of vibration at 250â¯Hz. At 1000â¯Hz a mass-spring effect was seen. At 500â¯Hz there was a transition frequency between vibration as a rigid-body and as a mass-spring. Higher frequencies (2000â¯Hz) showed that wave transmission was the primary vibrational mode of sound transmission over the cranium. These results broadly support previous research studies but open up potential areas of interest in the investigation of differing skull resonance frequencies.
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Authors
R.W.J McLeod, W.H. Roberts, I.A. Perry, B.E. Richardson, J.F. Culling,