Effects of Room Reflectance and Background Noise on Perceived Auditory Distance

Perceptions of egocentric auditory distance were investigated within an environment for which the reverberation time could be systematically varied without changes in the size or shape of the room. Two levels of wide-band background noise, differing by 20 dB, were used as a masking stimulus. Target sounds were presented from distances between 0.75 and 6.0 m and verbal reports of distance were collected from 288 listeners in two separate experiments. Changes in physical distance produced variation in reported distance in each configuration. Reported distance was generally proportional to real distance, but considerably underestimated when room reflectance was low. When room reflectance was high (T60 ≈ 1.7 s for the range of frequencies used), initial reports of distance were often overestimates; upon repeated presentation, judgments in the high reflectance room became more nearly veridical. The effect of increasing the background noise level was to decrease the perceived distance. These findings are in accord with expectations based upon the importance of reverberation cue(s) to distance and upon previous analyses from this laboratory.

[1]  Mark B. Gardner,et al.  Distance Estimation of 0° or Apparent 0°‐Oriented Speech Signals in Anechoic Space , 1969 .

[2]  R. Iman,et al.  Rank Transformations as a Bridge between Parametric and Nonparametric Statistics , 1981 .

[3]  J Blauert,et al.  Localization and the law of the first wavefront in the median plane. , 1971, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[4]  Ronald L. Iman,et al.  Comparison of Asymptotically Distribution-Free Procedures for the Analysis of Complete Blocks , 1984 .

[5]  V. D. Sanua,et al.  The Annual Meeting of the Eastern Psychological Association , 1958 .

[6]  Donald H. Mershon,et al.  Auditory Distance Judgments in Noise, with and without Hearing Protection , 1985 .

[7]  D H Mershon,et al.  Absolute and Relative Cues for the Auditory Perception of Egocentric Distance , 1979, Perception.

[8]  W. Hartmann Localization of sound in rooms. , 1983, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America.

[9]  S. O. Parsons,et al.  Human Factors Society , 1966 .

[10]  D. Mershon,et al.  Intensity and reverberation as factors in the auditory perception of egocentric distance , 1975 .

[11]  W E Simpson,et al.  Estimation of distance of a source of sound. , 1968, The American journal of psychology.

[12]  P. Coleman Failure to Localize the Source Distance of an Unfamiliar Sound , 1962 .

[13]  Akira Kurahashi,et al.  A Consideration of Distance Perception in Binaural Hearing , 1977 .

[14]  W. D. Neff,et al.  Apparent distance of sounds recorded in echoic and anechoic chambers. , 1980, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[15]  Ronald L. Iman,et al.  [Rank Transformations as a Bridge Between Parametric and Nonparametric Statistics]: Rejoinder , 1981 .