Discrimination of symmetric time-intensity traded binaural stimuli.
暂无分享,去创建一个
Experiments were conducted to determine the extent to which listeners can discriminate between different combinations of interaural time and intensity for binaural stimulus configurations which eliminate loudness, lateralization, and image-diffuseness cues. A two-interval forced choice paradigm was used, and the task of the subject was to determine the order of two stimuli, each of which was a slowly gated 500-Hz tone with a combination of interaural time and intensity differences that resulted in a centered primary spatial image. The two stimuli to be discriminated were symmetric in that they differed only in the polarity of their interaural differences. Also, in order to reduce artifacts introduced by variations in the coupling of the earphones to the head, acoustic monitoring and compensation was performed both before and after each experimental run. The performance of the two most highly trained subjects is consistent with previous experimental results that indicate an incomplete trading of interaural time and intensity information. The subjective perceptions of these observers are not consistent with previous studies that describe a "time image" and a "time-intensity traded" spatial image.