Abstract
Head-related transfer functions for differently centered narrow noise bands were obtained on 6 subjects. Derived from these measurements were covert peak areas (CPAs), defined as the spatial constellation of loudspeakers that generates maximal sound pressure at the entrance of the ear canal for specific bands of frequency. On the basis of previous data, we proposed that different frequency bands served as important spectral cues for monaural localization of sounds from different loci and that location judgments were directed toward the CPAs associated with the different bands. In the first study, the stimuli were bandpass filtered so that they contained only those frequencies whose associated CPAs occupied either the monaural listener’s “upper” or “lower” spatial regions. Loudspeakers, separated by 15°, were stationed in the left hemifield, ranging from 0° to 180° azimuth and −45° to 60° elevation. Subjects reported the loudspeaker from which the sound appeared to originate. Judgments of the sound’s elevation were in general accord with the CPAs associated with the different frequency segments. In the second study, monaural localization tests were administered in which different 2.0-kHz-wide frequency bands linked with specific CPAs were notch filtered from a 3.5-kHz highpass noise band. For the control condition, the highpass noise was unfiltered. The data demonstrated that filtering a frequency segment linked with specific CPAs resulted in significantly fewer location responses directed toward that particular spatial region. These results demonstrate in greater detail the relation between the directional filtering properties of the pinna and monaural localization of sound.
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This research was supported in part by NIH Grant ROI NS25889-02. The authors wish to express their gratitude to Victoria Cefaratti and Michael Umlauf for their assistance in collecting some of the data. Alan Musicant was most helpful in providing technical assistance and suggestions on the preparation of the manuscript; Biao Zhang served as a statistical consultant. Both authors are in the departments of Surgery and Psychology at the university of Chicago.
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Rogers, M.E., Butler, R.A. The linkage between stimulus frequency and covert peak areas as it relates to monaural localization. Perception & Psychophysics 52, 536–546 (1992). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03206715
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03206715
Keywords
- Spatial Region
- Notch Filter
- Noise Band
- Journal Ofthe Acoustical Society ofAmerica
- Location Judgment