Localization of sound in rooms.
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We have studied the ability of human listeners to locate the origin of a sound in a room in a series of source azimuth identification experiments. All experiments were done in a small rectangular concert hall with variable geometry and acoustical properties. Subjects localized a 50‐ms, 500‐Hz sine pulse with an rms error of 3.3° (±0.6°) regardless of room reverberation time. Lowering the ceiling from 11.5 to 3.5 m decreased the error to 2.8° (±0.6°). Subjects localized broadband noise without attack transients with an rms error of 2.3° (±0.6°) if the reverberation time was 1 s. The error increased to 3.2° (±0.7°) if the reverberation time was 5 s. For complex tones without attack transients the localization error continuously increased as the intensity of spectral components decreased. Performance was nearly random for a 500‐Hz sine tone, but was significantly better than random for a 5000‐Hz sine tone. Our azimuth identification experiments revealed significant biases, as much as 2°; such biases are, of ...