Champ auditif (French Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Champ auditif" in French language version.

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about.com

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  • Kaoru Ashihara, « Hearing thresholds for pure tones above 16kHz », The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 122, no 3,‎ , EL52–EL57 (ISSN 0001-4966, PMID 17927307, DOI 10.1121/1.2761883, Bibcode 2007ASAJ..122L..52A) :

    « The absolute threshold usually starts to increase sharply when the signal frequency exceeds about 15 kHz. ... The present results show that some humans can perceive tones up to at least 28 kHz when their level exceeds about 100 dB SPL. »

hypertextbook.com

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portal.issn.org

  • Kaoru Ashihara, « Hearing thresholds for pure tones above 16kHz », The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 122, no 3,‎ , EL52–EL57 (ISSN 0001-4966, PMID 17927307, DOI 10.1121/1.2761883, Bibcode 2007ASAJ..122L..52A) :

    « The absolute threshold usually starts to increase sharply when the signal frequency exceeds about 15 kHz. ... The present results show that some humans can perceive tones up to at least 28 kHz when their level exceeds about 100 dB SPL. »

loc.gov

lccn.loc.gov

lsu.edu

nih.gov

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

  • Kaoru Ashihara, « Hearing thresholds for pure tones above 16kHz », The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 122, no 3,‎ , EL52–EL57 (ISSN 0001-4966, PMID 17927307, DOI 10.1121/1.2761883, Bibcode 2007ASAJ..122L..52A) :

    « The absolute threshold usually starts to increase sharply when the signal frequency exceeds about 15 kHz. ... The present results show that some humans can perceive tones up to at least 28 kHz when their level exceeds about 100 dB SPL. »

  • Rodriguez Valiente A, Trinidad A, Garcia Berrocal JR, Gorriz C, Ramirez Camacho R, « Review: Extended high-frequency (9–20 kHz) audiometry reference thresholds in healthy subjects », Int J Audiol, vol. 53, no 8,‎ , p. 531–545 (PMID 24749665, DOI 10.3109/14992027.2014.893375)
  • Rickye S. Heffner, « Primate Hearing from a Mammalian Perspective », The Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology, vol. 281, no 1,‎ , p. 1111–1122 (PMID 15472899, DOI 10.1002/ar.a.20117, lire en ligne [archive du ], consulté le )
  • M. S. Blumberg, « Rodent ultrasonic short calls: locomotion, biomechanics, and communication », Journal of Comparative Psychology, vol. 106, no 4,‎ , p. 360–365 (PMID 1451418, DOI 10.1037/0735-7036.106.4.360)
  • Rickye S. Heffner, « Hearing Range of the Domestic Cat », Hearing Research, vol. 19, no 1,‎ , p. 85–88 (PMID 4066516, DOI 10.1016/0378-5955(85)90100-5, lire en ligne, consulté le )

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  • Robert C. Beason, « What Can Birds Hear? », USDA National Wildlife Research Center - Staff Publications,‎ (lire en ligne, consulté le )

utoledo.edu

psychology.utoledo.edu

utoledo.edu

  • Rickye S. Heffner, Primate Hearing From a Mammalian Perspective, (lire en ligne)

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whoi.edu