Abstract
Three experiments investigated auditory distance perception under natural listening conditions in a large open field. Targets varied in egocentric distance from 3 to 16 m. By presenting visual targets at these same locations on other trials, we were able to compare visual and auditory distance perception under similar circumstances. In some experimental conditions, observers made verbal reports of target distance. In others, observers viewed or listened to the target and then, without further perceptual information about the target, attempted to face the target, walk directly to it, or walk along a two-segment indirect path to it. The primary results were these. First, the verbal and walking responses were largely concordant, with the walking responses exhibiting less between-observer variability. Second, different motoric responses provided consistent estimates of the perceived target locations and, therefore, of the initially perceived distances. Third, under circumstances for which visual targets were perceived more or less correctly in distance using the more precise walking response, auditory targets were generally perceived with considerable systematic error. In particular, the perceived locations of the auditory targets varied only about half as much in distance as did the physical targets; in addition, there was a tendency to underestimate target distance, except for the closest targets.
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This research was supported by Grant 9740 from the National Eye Institute. Some of these results were presented at the 1994 meeting of the Psychonomic Society, St. Louis, MO.
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Loomis, J.M., Klatzky, R.L., Philbeck, J.W. et al. Assessing auditory distance perception using perceptually directed action. Perception & Psychophysics 60, 966–980 (1998). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03211932
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03211932