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Effect of Flanking Sounds on the Auditory Continuity Illusion
Author(s) -
Maori Kobayashi,
Makio Kashino
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0051969
Subject(s) - flanking maneuver , illusion , masking (illustration) , perception , noise (video) , auditory perception , auditory scene analysis , audiology , distraction , speech recognition , acoustics , communication , computer science , psychology , cognitive psychology , physics , artificial intelligence , medicine , neuroscience , art , image (mathematics) , archaeology , visual arts , history
Background The auditory continuity illusion or the perceptual restoration of a target sound briefly interrupted by an extraneous sound has been shown to depend on masking. However, little is known about factors other than masking. Methodology/Principal Findings We examined whether a sequence of flanking transient sounds affects the apparent continuity of a target tone alternated with a bandpass noise at regular intervals. The flanking sounds significantly increased the limit of perceiving apparent continuity in terms of the maximum target level at a fixed noise level, irrespective of the frequency separation between the target and flanking sounds: the flanking sounds enhanced the continuity illusion. This effect was dependent on the temporal relationship between the flanking sounds and noise bursts. Conclusions/Significance The spectrotemporal characteristics of the enhancement effect suggest that a mechanism to compensate for exogenous attentional distraction may contribute to the continuity illusion.

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