Sound localization in noise and sensitivity to spectral shape.

Sound localization in noise and sensitivity to spectral shape. Hear Res. 2013 Jun 11; Authors: Andéol G, Macpherson EA, Sabin AT Abstract Individual differences exist in sound localization performance even for normal-hearing listeners. Some of these differences might be related to acoustical differences in localization cues carried by the head related transfer functions (HRTF). Recent data suggest that individual differences in sound localization performance could also have a perceptual origin. The localization of an auditory target in the up/down and front/back dimensions requires the analysis of the spectral shape of the stimulus. In the present study, we investigated the role of an acoustic factor, the prominence of the spectral shape ("spectral strength") and the role of a perceptual factor, the listener's sensitivity to spectral shape, in individual differences observed in sound localization performance. Spectral strength was computed as the spectral distance between the magnitude spectrum of the HRTFs and a flat spectrum. Sensitivity to spectral shape was evaluated using spectral-modulation thresholds measured with a broadband (0.2-12.8 kHz) or high-frequency (4-16 kHz) carrier and for different spectral modulation frequencies (below 1 cycle/octave, between 1 and 2 cycles/octave, above 2 cycles/octave). Data obtained from 19 young normal-hearing listeners showed that low thresholds for spectral modulation frequency below 1 cycle/octave ...
Source: Hearing Research - Category: Audiology Authors: Tags: Hear Res Source Type: research
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