| Literature DB >> 28531210 |
Rosa Mariana Silva1,2, João Lamas1, Carlos César Silva1,3,4, Yann Coello5, Sandra Mouta1,4, Jorge Almeida Santos1,2,6.
Abstract
Perceptual judgments are an essential mechanism for our everyday interaction with other moving agents or events. For instance, estimation of the time remaining before an object contacts or passes us is essential to act upon or to avoid that object. Previous studies have demonstrated that participants use different cues to estimate the time to contact or the time to passage of approaching visual stimuli. Despite the considerable number of studies on the judgment of approaching auditory stimuli, not much is known about the cues that guide listeners' performance in an auditory Time-to-Passage (TTP) task. The present study evaluates how accurately participants judge approaching white-noise stimuli in a TTP task that included variable occlusion periods (portion of the presentation time where the stimulus is not audible). Results showed that participants were able to accurately estimate TTP and their performance, in general, was weakly affected by occlusion periods. Moreover, we looked into the psychoacoustic variables provided by the stimuli and analysed how binaural cues related with the performance obtained in the psychophysical task. The binaural temporal difference seems to be the psychoacoustic cue guiding participants' performance for lower amounts of occlusion, while the binaural loudness difference seems to be the cue guiding performance for higher amounts of occlusion. These results allowed us to explain the perceptual strategies used by participants in a TTP task (maintaining accuracy by shifting the informative cue for TTP estimation), and to demonstrate that the psychoacoustic cue guiding listeners' performance changes according to the occlusion period.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28531210 PMCID: PMC5439697 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177734
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Difference between physical simultaneity (1s) and the PSS (extracted from individual fit as a function of TTPt) plotted for each participant and for the different occlusion conditions.
Fig 2Proportion of “later than beep” responses as a function of TTPt (A), TTPf (B) and fDist (C) for each level of occlusion (red = 10% occlusion; green = 30% occlusion; blue = 50% occlusion). Different PSS are obtained for TTPf and fDist due to the different range of values of the variables (see Method section and Table in S1 Table), and therefore are not due to an effect of occlusion on judgment.
Fig 3Individual SD values for each participant plotted for each occlusion condition (extracted from fit as a function of TTPt, TTPf and fDist).
Psychoacoustic variables analysed as a function of the proportion of later than beep responses.
For each psychoacoustic variable and occlusion period the quality of the fit is presented through Deviance statistic, its' significance value, and AIC.
| Pooled Data | Deviance | p | AIC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10% occ | 11,998 | 42,869 | ||
| 30% occ | 10,698 | 33,738 | ||
| 50% occ | 5,8339 | 34,193 | ||
| 10% occ | 12,045 | 42,907 | ||
| 30% occ | 10,743 | 33,789 | ||
| 50% occ | 5,8311 | 34,172 | ||
| 10% occ | 19,653 | 54,46 | ||
| 30% occ | 4,3236 | 26,65 | ||
| 50% occ | 1,4062 | 25,924 | ||
| 10% occ | 19,763 | 52,67 | ||
| 30% occ | 3,5602 | 26,236 | ||
| 50% occ | 1,1641 | 25,783 | ||
| 10% occ | 5,8659 | 27,89 | ||
| 30% occ | 18,664 | 47,546 | ||
| 50% occ | x | x | x | |
Fig 4Psychoacoustic variables plotted for each occlusion condition.
ITDfinal empirical (A) ITDfinal model (B) and ILDLoud (C) are plotted as a function of the proportion of "later than beep" responses.