title: Audiologist
slug: audiologist
aliases:
  - Doctor of Audiology
  - AuD
  - Hearing Specialist
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - hearing
  - audiometry
  - balance
  - hearing-aids
  - sensory
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  Thinks by localizing the lesion along the auditory pathway from the audiogram,
  separating conductive from sensorineural loss, catching the asymmetry that
  hides a tumor, then rebuilding access to sound with verified technology.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: speech-language-pathologist
    type: collaboration
    note: turns restored hearing into communication, especially in children
  - slug: optometrist
    type: adjacent
    note: >-
      parallel sensory-organ specialist running
      measure-then-screen-for-hidden-disease logic
  - slug: neurologist
    type: related
    note: takes the vestibular and retrocochlear cases the audiologist flags
  - slug: pediatrician
    type: collaboration
    note: gateway for the newborn hearing screening pathway
  - slug: physician
    type: related
    note: manages systemic and medication-related contributors to hearing loss
specializations:
  - Pediatric Audiologist
  - Cochlear Implant Audiologist
  - Vestibular Audiologist
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Handbook of Clinical Audiology (Katz)
    kind: book
  - title: ASHA Clinical Practice Guidelines
    kind: standard
  - title: JCIH Position Statement (Early Hearing Detection and Intervention)
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      An audiologist exists to answer a deceptively simple question — what does
      this

      person actually hear, and why — then do something useful about it.
      "Hearing

      loss" is a family of failures that can sit anywhere from wax in the ear
      canal to

      the cortex, each origin pointing to a different action. The job is to
      localize

      the lesion along that pathway, separate the conductive plumbing problem
      from the

      sensorineural nerve problem, catch the rare tumor behind an asymmetry, and

      rebuild access to sound — through hearing aids, cochlear implants, aural

      rehabilitation, and management of tinnitus and balance — for people whose

      connection to speech, safety, and others depends on it.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Localize where along the auditory and vestibular pathway the problem
      lives,

      distinguish the benign from the sinister, and restore access to sound and
      balance

      with the right technology fitted to the real ear.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The core work is the diagnostic evaluation and what flows from it. An
      audiologist

      takes a history, examines the ear canal and drum (otoscopy), and runs
      pure-tone

      audiometry by air and bone conduction with masking, speech audiometry,

      tympanometry, and acoustic reflexes — assembling the type, degree, and

      configuration of hearing loss. They add otoacoustic emissions and auditory

      brainstem response to test the cochlea or nerve directly, and vestibular
      testing

      (VNG, calorics, VEMP) when balance is the complaint. From that they
      decide:

      referral, hearing aids, cochlear implant candidacy, or rehabilitation.
      They fit

      and verify amplification with real-ear measurement, counsel patients,
      manage

      tinnitus, and run pediatric and newborn screening. The throughline is

      interpretation — the audiogram is only as good as the clinician reading
      it.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Localize before you treat.** Conductive, sensorineural, mixed, or
        retrocochlear — the type of loss dictates everything that follows.
      - **Asymmetry is a red flag.** A unilateral or asymmetric sensorineural
      loss, or
        asymmetric tinnitus, must rule out a retrocochlear lesion (acoustic neuroma)
        before being called "just age."
      - **Mask when you must, or you're measuring the wrong ear.** Without
      masking, the
        better ear answers for the worse one and the audiogram lies.
      - **Fit to the real ear, not the average ear.** Manufacturer settings are
      a
        guess; real-ear measurement proves what the eardrum receives.
      - **Speech is the goal, not the audiogram.** Thresholds matter because
      they
        predict understanding; the patient cares about a grandchild's voice.
      - **Children are not small adults.** Pediatric loss is a language
      emergency on a
        developmental clock; method, urgency, and stakes all change.
      - **Know the difference between hearing care and medical care; refer the
      medical
        out.**
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The auditory pathway as a circuit to be localized.** Sound travels
        canal → drum → ossicles → cochlea → auditory nerve → brainstem → cortex.
        Each test probes a segment; find where the signal degrades.
      - **The air–bone gap.** Bone conduction bypasses the middle ear and tests
      the
        cochlea directly; air conduction tests the whole system. A gap between them
        *is* a conductive component.
      - **Conductive vs. sensorineural vs. mixed.** Conductive = air worse than
      bone,
        with a gap (wax, fluid, otosclerosis); sensorineural = both equally depressed,
        no gap (cochlea/nerve); mixed = both.
      - **The cross-hearing problem and masking.** Sound to a dead ear can be
      heard by
        the good ear through the skull; masking it forces the test ear to answer for
        itself.
      - **Speech recognition vs. audibility.** Loud enough doesn't guarantee
        intelligible; word recognition out of proportion to thresholds points to nerve
        or central problems.
      - **The objective–subjective ladder.** OAEs and ABR are objective and
      anchor
        pediatric and difficult cases; behavioral audiometry is subjective but richer.
        Cross-check one against the other.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - An audiogram localizes a lesion but does not name a disease; the pattern
        points, the history and other tests confirm.
      - Untreated childhood hearing loss is lost language and development on a
      closing
        window — early detection is the whole game.
      - Amplification restores audibility but cannot repair a damaged cochlea's
        distortion; expectations must match the biology.
      - Asymmetry, sudden loss, and unilateral tinnitus are the eye of the
      needle
        through which serious disease passes — never wave them through.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is there an air–bone gap — conductive, sensorineural, or mixed?

      - Are the ears symmetric, and if not, have I ruled out a retrocochlear
      cause?

      - Did I mask correctly, or is the better ear answering for the worse?

      - Does word recognition match the thresholds, or is it disproportionately
      poor?

      - Is this sudden sensorineural loss — a same-week emergency — or chronic?

      - Is this a hearing problem I manage, or a medical/surgical one I refer?

      - For this child, how fast can I confirm and intervene before language
      slips?

      - Does what I programmed match what the eardrum receives on real-ear?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **Type-of-loss algorithm.** Read the air and bone curves: gap present →
        conductive → medical/ENT (wax, effusion, otosclerosis). No gap, both depressed →
        sensorineural → amplification, but check symmetry and word recognition first.
      - **Red-flag referral gate.** Sudden sensorineural loss (urgent steroid
      within
        days), asymmetric loss or unilateral tinnitus (image to exclude acoustic
        neuroma), pulsatile tinnitus, otorrhea, vertigo with neurological signs, or
        pain/discharge → medical referral before rehabilitation.
      - **Cochlear implant candidacy.** When hearing aids no longer deliver
      useful
        speech understanding despite optimal fitting — severe-to-profound loss with poor
        aided word recognition — evaluate for implant on functional benefit.
      - **Hearing aid fitting protocol.** Prescriptive target (NAL-NL2 or DSL
      for
        children) → fit → verify with real-ear measurement → validate with outcome and
        speech-in-noise. No verification, no proof it works.
      - **Pediatric pathway.** Failed newborn screen → diagnostic ABR/OAE →
      confirm and
        fit early → enroll in early intervention; speed is the framework.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **History.** Onset and tempo, symmetry, noise exposure, tinnitus,
      dizziness,
         otologic and family history, and the functional complaint.
      2. **Otoscopy.** Look in the canal and at the drum — clear wax, spot
      effusion or
         perforation — before any threshold means anything.
      3. **Immittance.** Tympanometry and acoustic reflexes to assess middle-ear
      status
         and cross-check the conductive picture.
      4. **Pure-tone audiometry.** Air and bone conduction with proper masking;
      plot the
         audiogram and read type, degree, and configuration.
      5. **Speech testing.** Speech reception threshold and word recognition;
         speech-in-noise when the complaint is "I hear but can't understand."
      6. **Objective tests as needed.** OAEs and ABR for pediatric, non-organic,
      or
         retrocochlear questions; vestibular battery if balance is involved.
      7. **Synthesize and decide.** Localize the lesion, flag red flags, refer
      or
         proceed to rehabilitation.
      8. **Fit and verify.** Program amplification, prove it with real-ear
      measurement.

      9. **Follow up.** Validate real-world benefit, adjust, and recall on a
      schedule.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Amplification vs. medical referral.** A conductive loss might be
      surgically
        fixable; fitting an aid over a treatable middle-ear problem masks it.
      - **Gain vs. comfort and feedback.** More gain improves audibility but
      risks
        discomfort, feedback, and rejection; the prescription the patient won't wear
        helps nobody.
      - **Audibility vs. speech-in-noise.** Turning everything up can worsen
        understanding in noise; directional and noise-management features trade gain
        for clarity.
      - **Hearing aid persistence vs. implant referral.** Pushing aids past
      their
        usefulness delays a cochlear implant.
      - **Cosmetic discretion vs. performance.** Tiny invisible aids limit power
      and
        features.
      - **Speed vs. certainty in pediatrics.** Move fast for language, but a
      wrong fit
        on a developing child has consequences — objective tests buy both.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - No air–bone gap with depressed bone means the nerve, not the plumbing.

      - Mask whenever the asymmetry exceeds interaural attenuation, or you're
      testing a
        ghost.
      - Sudden one-sided hearing loss is an emergency — same-week ENT, not
      "monitor."

      - Asymmetric loss or one-sided tinnitus earns an MRI question every time.

      - If word recognition is far worse than the audiogram predicts, suspect
      the
        nerve.
      - A hearing aid you didn't verify on real-ear is one you didn't fit.

      - The patient who hears but can't understand needs speech-in-noise
      testing, not
        more volume.
      - A flat tympanogram with a conductive loss is fluid until proven
      otherwise.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Missing the retrocochlear tumor.** Calling an asymmetric loss
      "age-related"
        and never imaging the acoustic neuroma behind it.
      - **Treating sudden loss as routine.** Booking a sudden sensorineural loss
      weeks
        out, missing the steroid window.
      - **Masking errors.** Under-masking lets the good ear answer; over-masking
      shifts
        thresholds — either way the audiogram lies.
      - **Fitting without verification.** Trusting first-fit software and never
        measuring real-ear output, leaving the patient under- or over-amplified.
      - **Over-amplifying distortion.** Cranking gain on a damaged cochlea,
      worsening
        intelligibility.
      - **Slow pediatric pathway.** Letting a confirmed infant loss drift,
      spending
        irreplaceable months of language acquisition.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **The age dismissal** — attributing every loss to aging without checking
        symmetry or red flags.
      - **First-fit-and-forget** — shipping defaults without verification or
      follow-up.

      - **Volume as the only lever** — answering every complaint with gain
      instead of
        noise management or referral.
      - **Selling premium tiers by reflex** — fitting the most expensive device
      rather
        than the one matching the listening needs.
      - **Ignoring the unaided ear** — treating one ear and leaving asymmetry
        uninvestigated.
      - **Tinnitus brush-off** — dismissing tinnitus without screening for the
        unilateral or pulsatile patterns signaling pathology.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **Audiogram** — graph of hearing thresholds (dB HL) across frequencies,
      by air
        and bone conduction, per ear.
      - **Air–bone gap** — difference between air and bone thresholds; its
      presence
        defines a conductive component.
      - **Conductive / sensorineural / mixed loss** — loss in the outer/middle
      ear /
        cochlea or nerve / both.
      - **Masking** — narrow-band noise to the non-test ear so it can't answer
      for the
        test ear.
      - **Tympanometry** — eardrum mobility and middle-ear pressure; types A, B
      (flat,
        fluid), C (negative pressure).
      - **OAE** — otoacoustic emissions; an objective screen of outer-hair-cell
        function.
      - **ABR** — auditory brainstem response; an objective test of the nerve
      and
        brainstem pathway.
      - **Real-ear measurement (REM)** — probe-microphone verification of the
      sound the
        aid delivers at the eardrum.
      - **Speech recognition / discrimination score** — percent of words
      understood;
        clarity beyond audibility.
      - **VNG / calorics / VEMP** — vestibular tests assessing balance function
      and
        asymmetry.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **Audiometer and sound booth** — calibrated pure-tone and speech
      testing.

      - **Otoscope and video otoscope** — to inspect the canal and tympanic
      membrane.

      - **Tympanometer / immittance bridge** — middle-ear function and acoustic
        reflexes.
      - **OAE and ABR systems** — objective cochlear and neural testing.

      - **Real-ear measurement system** — probe-microphone hearing aid
      verification.

      - **Hearing aid programming software and fitting prescriptions** (NAL-NL2,
      DSL).

      - **Vestibular battery** (VNG, rotary chair, VEMP) — balance assessment.

      - **Cochlear implant evaluation and mapping equipment.**
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      The audiologist sits between hearing health and medicine and works the
      seam

      deliberately. The closest partner is the otolaryngologist (ENT), who
      receives

      conductive problems, sudden losses, asymmetries needing imaging, and
      surgical

      candidates including cochlear implants. Audiologists co-manage with
      pediatricians

      and early-intervention teams on newborn screening and childhood loss,
      where the

      speech-language pathologist turns restored audibility into language. They
      work

      with neurologists on vestibular and retrocochlear cases and primary care
      on

      systemic and medication-related contributors. The recurring friction is
      the

      medical-vs-hearing boundary: which findings must go to a physician before
      any aid

      is fitted, and not letting dispensing blur that line.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Audiology carries a tension between caring for hearing and selling
      devices, and

      the ethical center holds the patient's interest above the sale. Core
      duties:

      refer the medically treatable problem out rather than amplifying over it;
      never

      miss the red flags — sudden loss, asymmetry, unilateral tinnitus — that
      signal

      disease; recommend the technology that fits the patient's needs and
      budget, not

      the highest margin; verify what you fit; and counsel honestly about what a

      hearing aid can and cannot restore, so expectations don't curdle into a
      drawer of

      unused devices. In pediatrics the duty is sharpest: the patient cannot
      advocate

      and the developmental clock is unforgiving — delay is itself a harm.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **A 60-year-old reports gradual hearing trouble, but the audiogram shows a
      clear

      asymmetry — the right ear markedly worse, with disproportionately poor
      word

      recognition and a faint right-sided tinnitus.** The easy read is
      "age-related

      loss, fit aids." The expert stops at the asymmetry. Age-related loss is

      symmetric; a one-sided sensorineural loss with poor word recognition and

      unilateral tinnitus is an acoustic neuroma until imaging says otherwise.

      Amplifying first lets a benign-but-growing tumor sit unexamined. ENT
      referral for

      an MRI of the internal auditory canals precedes any hearing aid
      discussion.


      **A newborn fails the hospital hearing screen.** There is no behavioral

      complaint — the patient is an infant. The framework is speed: schedule
      diagnostic

      ABR and OAE promptly to confirm whether there is a true, permanent loss
      and its

      degree, because every month of unaided severe loss is lost language. On

      confirming a bilateral sensorineural loss, the plan is early fitting with
      DSL

      pediatric targets verified on real-ear, immediate enrollment in early

      intervention, and honest parent counseling about the developmental window.
      The

      discipline's logic compresses here: the diagnosis is objective, the
      urgency

      absolute, the cost of delay permanent.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      The primary medical partner is the otolaryngologist, who owns the surgical
      and

      medical ear and receives conductive losses, sudden losses, and tumor
      referrals.

      The speech-language pathologist is the rehabilitation counterpart, turning

      restored hearing into communication. The optometrist is a structural
      parallel —

      another sensory-organ specialist running the same

      measure-the-function-then-screen-for-the-hidden-disease logic on a
      different

      organ. Neurology takes vestibular and retrocochlear cases; pediatricians
      gate the

      newborn screening pathway.
  - heading: References
    markdown: |-
      - *Handbook of Clinical Audiology* — Katz
      - *Pure-Tone Audiometry and Masking* — Yacullo
      - ASHA Clinical Practice Guidelines (assessment, hearing aid fitting)
      - *Audiology: Diagnosis* — Roeser, Valente & Hosford-Dunn
      - JCIH Position Statement on Early Hearing Detection and Intervention
