| Literature DB >> 7714264 |
Abstract
Frequency discrimination was measured for a wide range of center frequencies (0.25-8 kHz) using three different tasks. In the first (difference limens for frequency, DLFs) subjects were required to indicate which of two successive tone pulses was higher in frequency. In the second (difference limens for change, DLCs), two successive pairs of tone pulses were presented; one pair had the same frequency and the other pair differed in frequency. Subjects were required to indicate which pair differed in frequency. In the third (frequency-modulation difference limens, FMDLs), subjects were required to indicate which of two successive tone pulses was frequency modulated. Modulation rates were 2, 5, or 10 Hz. For frequencies up to 2 kHz, DLFs and DLCs were small (less than 0.6% of the center frequency) and were similar to one another. For frequencies of 4 kHz and above, both DLFs and DLCs increased markedly, but the increase was greater for DLFs. Thus the worsening of performance at high frequencies is greater when subjects are required to indicate the direction of a frequency change than when they just have to detect any change. FMDLs, when expressed relative to the carrier frequency, varied much less with frequency than DLFs or DLCs. At 2 kHz and below, FMDLs were larger than DLFs or DLCs. Above 4 kHz, FMDLs were smaller than DLFs or DLCs. At 2 kHz and below, FMDLs usually worsened with increasing modulation frequency. Above 4 kHz, FMDLs improved with increasing modulation frequency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Mesh:
Year: 1995 PMID: 7714264 DOI: 10.1121/1.411968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acoust Soc Am ISSN: 0001-4966 Impact factor: 1.840