Testing the Precedence Effect in the Median Plane Reveals Backward Spatial Masking of Sound

被引:0
|
作者
Rachel Ege
A. John van Opstal
Peter Bremen
Marc M. van Wanrooij
机构
[1] Radboud University,Biophysics Department, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour
[2] Erasmus Medical Center,Department of Neuroscience
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Two synchronous sounds at different locations in the midsagittal plane induce a fused percept at a weighted-average position, with weights depending on relative sound intensities. In the horizontal plane, sound fusion (stereophony) disappears with a small onset asynchrony of 1–4 ms. The leading sound then fully determines the spatial percept (the precedence effect). Given that accurate localisation in the median plane requires an analysis of pinna-related spectral-shape cues, which takes ~25–30 ms of sound input to complete, we wondered at what time scale a precedence effect for elevation would manifest. Listeners localised the first of two sounds, with spatial disparities between 10–80 deg, and inter-stimulus delays between 0–320 ms. We demonstrate full fusion (averaging), and largest response variability, for onset asynchronies up to at least 40 ms for all spatial disparities. Weighted averaging persisted, and gradually decayed, for delays >160 ms, suggesting considerable backward masking. Moreover, response variability decreased with increasing delays. These results demonstrate that localisation undergoes substantial spatial blurring in the median plane by lagging sounds. Thus, the human auditory system, despite its high temporal resolution, is unable to spatially dissociate sounds in the midsagittal plane that co-occur within a time window of at least 160 ms.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 16 条
  • [1] Testing the Precedence Effect in the Median Plane Reveals Backward Spatial Masking of Sound
    Ege, Rachel
    van Opstal, A. John
    Bremen, Peter
    van Wanrooij, Marc M.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2018, 8
  • [2] Spatial discrimination of sound sources in the median plane: The effect of a preceding noise
    Getzmann, S
    ACTA ACUSTICA UNITED WITH ACUSTICA, 2004, 90 (06) : 1185 - 1191
  • [3] Psychophysical and physiological evidence for a precedence effect in the median sagittal plane
    Litovsky, RY
    Rakerd, B
    Yin, TCT
    Hartmann, WM
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1997, 77 (04) : 2223 - 2226
  • [4] Spatial Perception of Sound Source Distribution in the Median Plane
    Pulkki, Ville
    Pontynen, Henri
    Santala, Olli
    JOURNAL OF THE AUDIO ENGINEERING SOCIETY, 2019, 67 (11): : 855 - 870
  • [5] Spatial perception of sound source distribution in the median plane
    Pulkki, Ville
    Pöntynen, Henri
    Santala, Olli
    AES: Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, 2019, 67 (11): : 855 - 870
  • [6] EFFECT OF TRAINING IN SOUND LOCALIZATION IN MEDIAN PLANE
    YORIFUJI, Y
    MORIMOTO, M
    ANDO, Y
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1975, 57 : S37 - S37
  • [7] Precedence effect and related phenomena in the median plane for short time delay
    Takada, Yuki
    Otani, Makoto
    ACOUSTICAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 43 (01) : 50 - 56
  • [8] Spatial release from speech-on-speech masking in the median sagittal plane
    Martin, Russell L.
    McAnally, Ken I.
    Bolia, Robert S.
    Eberle, Geoff
    Brungart, Douglas S.
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2012, 131 (01): : 378 - 385
  • [9] THE SPATIAL ATTRIBUTES OF STIMULUS FREQUENCY IN THE MEDIAN SAGITTAL PLANE AND THEIR ROLE IN SOUND LOCALIZATION
    BUTLER, RA
    HELWIG, CC
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY, 1983, 4 (03) : 165 - 173
  • [10] Spatial Unmasking Effect on Speech Reception Threshold in the Median Plane
    Berwick, Nathan
    Lee, Hyunkook
    APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2020, 10 (15):