Localization of Sound from Single and Paired Sources
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Three experiments on the localization of air‐borne sound are described. They were conducted in an anechoic room and employed an acoustical “pointer” as the subject's method of indicating the direction of the stimulus tone. The pointer was a small loudspeaker carried on a boom which rotated about a vertical axis through the subject's head. This speaker presented a wide‐band noise which alternated with the tone to be localized. The switching was transientless and was performed by an electronic gate having a 100‐millisecond rise and decay time.Three small loudspeakers in enclosures, one mounted directly in front of the subject and one 40° to each side, presented the stimulus tones to be localized. In the first experiment the speakers were employed singly. In the other two experiments they were used in pairs. In the second experiment the pairs of speakers were in phase; in the third, they were in phase opposition.The stimulus conditions of Experiment 2 generate a “phantom source” which appears to lie between ...