Spectral integration of interaural time differences in auditory localization
Author(s) -
Nicolas Le Goff,
Jörg M. Buchholz,
Torsten Dau
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
proceedings of meetings on acoustics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISSN - 1939-800X
DOI - 10.1121/1.4799593
Subject(s) - center frequency , acoustics , broadband , sound localization , bandwidth (computing) , psychoacoustics , mathematics , computer science , audiology , physics , perception , psychology , band pass filter , telecommunications , optics , neuroscience , medicine
This study investigates how the auditory system integrates spatial information across frequency. In experiment one, discrimination thresholds for interaural time differences (ITDs) were measured as a function of both reference ITD and center frequency (CF) of noises with bandwidth of one ERB. In addition, discrimination thresholds were also measured as a function of CF for different values of interaural coherence (IC) typical of sounds in realistic acoustic environments. For both high ICs and small reference ITDs, discrimination thresholds were lowest for CFs between 700 and 1000 Hz. For smaller ICs and larger reference ITDs, this dominance region shifted towards lower CFs. A conceptual localization model was developed that used the variance of the ITD thresholds to optimally weight the contribution of the individual frequency bands before spectral integration. In experiment two the model was tested by asking listeners to align a broadband noise signal with an ITD that was fixed across frequency onto a broadband noise target with different ITDs in individual 1 ERB-wide subbands. The results were consistent with both the model predictions and the shift of dominance range observed in experiment one.8 page(s
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