Search results for "intensity discrimination"

showing 7 items of 7 documents

Electrophysiological Correlates of Intensity Resolution Under Forward Masking

2010

Nonsimultaneous masking can severely impair auditory intensity resolution, but the effect strongly depends on the stimulus configuration. For example, an intense forward masker causes a pronounced impairment in intensity resolution for standards presented at intermediate levels, but not for standards presented at low and high levels, resulting in a midlevel hump pattern (Zeng et al., Hear Res 55:223-230, 1991). Several aspects of the phenomenon cannot be explained by mechanisms in the auditory periphery. For instance, backward maskers cause midlevel humps at least as large as the humps caused by forward maskers. The present experiment was aimed at studying the relation between the effects o…

PhysicsIntensity discriminationElectrophysiologymedicine.medical_specialtyAmplitudemedicine.diagnostic_testQUIETForward maskingmedicineStimulus (physiology)ElectroencephalographyAudiologyEvoked potential
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2021

Previous work showed that the beginning of a sound is more important for the perception of loudness than later parts. When a short silent gap of sufficient duration is inserted into a sound, this primacy effect reoccurs in the second sound part after the gap. The present study investigates whether this temporal weighting occurs independently for different frequency bands. Sounds consisting of two bandpass noises were presented in four different conditions: (1) a simultaneous gap in both bands, (2) a gap in only the lower frequency band, (3) a gap in only the higher frequency band, or (4) no gap. In all conditions, the temporal loudness weights showed a primacy effect at sound onset. For the…

Frequency bandAcoustics05 social sciences01 natural sciences050105 experimental psychologyRadio spectrumLoudnessWeightingIntensity discriminationDuration (music)0103 physical sciencesSecond sound0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychology010301 acousticsGeneral PsychologyFrontiers in Psychology
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Temporal loudness weights are frequency specific

2021

Previous work showed that the beginning of a sound is more important for the perception of loudness than later parts. When a short silent gap of sufficient duration is inserted into a sound, this primacy effect reoccurs in the second sound part after the gap. The present study investigates whether this temporal weighting occurs independently for different frequency bands. Sounds consisting of two bandpass noises were presented in four different conditions: (1) a simultaneous gap in both bands, (2) a gap in only the lower frequency band, (3) a gap in only the higher frequency band, or (4) no gap. In all conditions, the temporal loudness weights showed a primacy effect at sound onset. For the…

frequency specificlcsh:Psychologyintensity discrimination150 Psychologielcsh:BF1-990Psychologytemporal weightsauditory150 PsychologyloudnessGeneral PsychologyOriginal Research
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The decision process in forward-masked intensity discrimination: evidence from molecular analyses.

2009

In a two-interval forced-choice intensity discrimination task presenting a fixed increment, the level of the forward masker in interval 1 and interval 2 was sampled independently from the same normal distribution on each trial. Mean and standard deviation of the distribution were varied. Correlational analyses of the trial-by-trial data revealed different decision strategies depending on the relation between mean masker level and standard level. If the two levels were identical, listeners tended to select the interval containing the higher-level masker, behaving like an energy detector at the output of a temporal window of integration. For mean masker level higher than the standard level, m…

MaleSignal Detection PsychologicalTime FactorsAcoustics and UltrasonicsAcousticsDecision MakingAuditory Thresholdbehavioral disciplines and activitiesStandard deviationLoudnessIntensity discriminationNormal distributionInterval (music)Young AdultDiscrimination PsychologicalArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)StatisticsHumansCorrelation methodFemaleNegative correlationDecision processPerceptual Maskingpsychological phenomena and processesMathematicsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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Binaural release from masking in forward-masked intensity discrimination: Evidence for effects of selective attention

2012

In a forward-masked intensity discrimination task, we manipulated the perceived lateralization of the masker via variation of the interaural time difference (ITD). The maskers and targets were 500 Hz pure tones with a duration of 30 ms. Standards of 30 and 60 dB SPL were combined with 60 or 90 dB SPL maskers. As expected, the presentation of a forward masker perceived as lateralized to the other side of the head as the target resulted in a significantly smaller elevation of the intensity difference limen than a masker lateralized ipsilaterally. This binaural release from masking in forward-masked intensity discrimination cannot be explained by peripheral mechanisms because varying the ITD l…

AdultMaleMasking (art)medicine.medical_specialtySpeech recognitionInteraural time differenceMonauralAudiologybehavioral disciplines and activitiesLateralization of brain functionIntensity discriminationYoung AdultDiscrimination PsychologicalmedicineHumansAttentionSound LocalizationSelective attentionAuditory ThresholdSensory SystemsIntensity (physics)Acoustic StimulationAuditory PerceptionFemalePsychologyPerceptual MaskingBinaural recordingpsychological phenomena and processesPsychoacousticsHearing Research
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The mid-difference hump in forward-masked intensity discrimination

2008

Forward-masked intensity-difference limens (DLs) for pure-tone standards presented at low, medium, and high levels were obtained for a wide range of masker-standard level differences. At a standard level of 25 dB SPL, the masker had a significant effect on intensity resolution, and the data showed a mid-difference hump: The DL elevation was greater at intermediate than at large masker-standard level differences. These results support the hypothesis that the effect of a forward masker on intensity resolution is modulated by the similarity between the masker and the standard. For a given masker-standard level difference, the effect of the masker on the DL was larger for a 55-dB SPL than for t…

AdultMaleMasking (art)medicine.medical_specialtyAcoustics and UltrasonicsDetection thresholdLoudness PerceptionAcousticsAudiologyLoudnessIntensity (physics)Intensity discriminationArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Speech Discrimination TestsSpeech PerceptionmedicineHumansFemalePsychoacousticsPerceptual MaskingThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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A Unified Theory of Psychophysical Laws in Auditory Intensity Perception.

2020

Psychophysical laws quantitatively relate perceptual magnitude to stimulus intensity. While most people have accepted Stevens's power function as the psychophysical law, few believe in Fechner's original idea using just-noticeable-differences (jnd) as a constant perceptual unit to educe psychophysical laws. Here I present a unified theory in hearing, starting with a general form of Zwislocki's loudness function (1965) to derive a general form of Brentano's law. I will arrive at a general form of the loudness-jnd relationship that unifies previous loudness-jnd theories. Specifically, the "slope," "proportional-jnd," and "equal-loudness, equal-jnd" theories, are three additive terms in the ne…

medicine.medical_treatmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990BioengineeringLoudnessWeber's lawStevens's lawClinical ResearchCochlear implantPerceptionHypothesis and TheorymedicineStevens’s lawjust-noticeable-differences (jnd)PsychologyauditoryPower functionUnified field theoryGeneral PsychologyBackward maskingmedia_commonAssistive Technologyintensity discriminationRehabilitationNeurosciencesloudnessWeber’s lawZwislockilcsh:PsychologyLawForward maskingjust-noticeable-differencesCognitive SciencesFechner's lawPsychologyFechner’s lawFree parameter
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