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Onset dominance in lateralization.

Authors :
Freyman RL
Zurek PM
Balakrishnan U
Chiang YC
Source :
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America [J Acoust Soc Am] 1997 Mar; Vol. 101 (3), pp. 1649-59.
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

Saberi and Perrott [Acustica 81, 272-275 (1995)] found that the in-head lateralization of a relatively long-duration pulse train could be controlled by the interaural delay of the single pulse pair that occurs at onset. The present study examined this further, using an acoustic pointer measure of lateralization, with stimulus manipulations designed to determine conditions under which lateralization was consistent with the interaural onset delay. The present stimuli were wideband pulse trains, noise-burst trains, and inharmonic complexes, 250 ms in duration, chosen for the ease with which interaural delays and correlations of select temporal segments of the stimulus could be manipulated. The stimulus factors studied were the periodicity of the ongoing part of the signal as well as the multiplicity and ambiguity of interaural delays. The results, in general, showed that the interaural onset delay controlled lateralization when the steady state binaural cues were relatively weak, either because the spectral components were only sparsely distributed across frequency or because the interaural time delays were ambiguous. Onset dominance can be disrupted by sudden stimulus changes within the train, and several examples of such changes are described. Individual subjects showed strong left-right asymmetries in onset effectiveness. The results have implications for understanding how onset and ongoing interaural delay cues contribute to the location estimates formed by the binaural auditory system.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0001-4966
Volume :
101
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9069632
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1121/1.418149