| Literature DB >> 27878557 |
Josef Schlittenlacher1,2, Wolfgang Ellermeier3, Gül Avci3.
Abstract
Although many studies have explored the relation between reaction time (RT) and loudness, including effects of intensity, frequency, and binaural summation, comparable work on spectral summation is rare. However, most real-world sounds are not pure tones and typically have bandwidths covering several critical bands. Since comparing to a 1-kHz pure tone, the reference tone, is important for loudness measurement and standardization, the present work focuses on comparing RTs for broadband noise to those for 1-kHz pure tones in three experiments using different spectral and binaural configurations. The results of Experiments 1 and 2 yield good quantitative agreement with spectral loudness summation models for moderate and high sound pressure levels, measured using both pink noise covering almost the entire hearing range and bandpass-filtered pink noise with different center frequencies. However, at lower levels, the RT measurements yield an interaction of level and bandwidth, which is not in line with loudness scaling data. In Experiment 3, which investigated the binaural summation of broadband sounds, the binaural gain for white noise was determined to be 9 dB, which is somewhat larger than what had been found in previous RT measurements using 1-kHz pure tones.Entities:
Keywords: Hearing; Psychoacoustics; Reaction time methods
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27878557 PMCID: PMC5306307 DOI: 10.3758/s13414-016-1237-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Atten Percept Psychophys ISSN: 1943-3921 Impact factor: 2.199
Fig. 1Results of Experiment 1: Geometric mean RTs as a function of sound pressure level to the onset of four sounds: 1-kHz pure tone (blue circles, dashed line), 3.15-kHz pure tone (blue squares, dashed line, 0.5 to 2 kHz bandpass-filtered pink noise (red circles, solid line), 1.25 to 5 kHz bandpass-filtered pink noise (red squares, solid line). Standard errors of the mean (SEM) are shown for the 1-kHz pure tone, one SEM into each direction. They are very similar for the other conditions
Fig. 2Results of Experiment 2: Geometric mean reaction times of 21 listeners as a function of sound pressure level for 1-kHz pure tones (blue circles) and pink noise (red squares). Error bars indicate one standard error of the mean into each direction. The dashed line shows predictions made by the DIN 45631 loudness model, using the distance to the regression line of the 1-kHz pure tone for equalizing the LDEL with the LDERT. The dotted line shows the same for ANSI S3.4-2007
Fig. 3Results of Experiment 3: Geometric mean reaction times of 20 listeners to the onset of white noise as a function of sound pressure level (abscissa) and aural presentation mode (blue squares: diotic; blue circles: uncorrelated binaural; red triangles pointing downwards: left ear; red triangles pointing upwards: right ear). Linear regression lines were fitted to the binaural and monaural conditions. Standard errors of the mean are shown for diotic and right-ear conditions