Going by the logarithmic frequency graph they've got there, you can see they assume that it becomes exponentially more difficult to hear anything even (apparently) approaching 20khz. Now I actually work doing audio engineering for a company that deals with ultrasonic transducers. They are capable of rather high output levels (about 110db @ 1 meter from my measurements) at a nominal frequency of right around 25.1khz (where they are most efficient). Guess what? Pretty much EVERYONE in our office can hear these suckers when you have them angled the right way against your ear (and this is around a ft. and half away so I suppose you can add 6db per it being a point source and say that the sound is 116db at the ear). The output level and pure tone frequency (from the ultrasonic transducer) I've confirmed using a calibrated Dayton EMM-6 measurement microphone (from Spectrum labs) which was set against a Class II decibel level meter using a 1khz tone.
Myth = BUSTED
Maybe I should write a white paper because apparently "audiologists" know f**k-all lol. Also the way this describes the "preferred" method of taking the perceived sound level tests is also bullshit:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal-loud ... esentation
Because at frequencies over 1khz and especially approaching 20khz a frontal presentation will cause the frequencies that you are trying to record useful data from to be filtered by the lack of a direct path to the eardrum. I.E. the person has to tilt their head slightly to hear them better. In the real world, every source of sound is not going to sit directly in front of a person - people tend to actually move and turn their head (gasp!) and not face potential real-world sources of ultrasonic sound head-on all the time. So using only a frontal presentation is useless because it has nothing to do with how people in the real-world reliably interact with sound.
Anyway. Thought you all should know - what you've been taught is wrong.