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Growth of simultaneous masking for fm < fs: effects of overall frequency and level.
Authors:S P Bacon  L N Boden  J Lee  J L Repovsch
Affiliation:Department of Speech and Hearing Science, Arizona State University, Tempe 85287-1908, USA. spb@asu.edu
Abstract:Growth-of-masking (GOM) functions were obtained in three groups of normal-hearing subjects using a simultaneous-masking paradigm. In all cases, the signal frequency (fs) was higher than the masker frequency (fm), either by a certain ratio (1.44) or by a certain distance [3 equivalent rectangular bandwidths (ERBs)]. The purpose was to evaluate the effect of overall frequency on the slope of the steep portion of the GOM function, and to evaluate the change in slope that can occur at high levels. Signal frequency ranged from 400 to 5000 Hz, and masker level ranged from 40 to 95 dB SPL. On average, the slope of the steep portion of the GOM function was about 1.4 for signal frequencies from 400 to 750 Hz, and 2.0 for signal frequencies from 1944 to 5000 Hz. This is consistent with the possibility that the cochlea may behave more linearly at the apical (low-frequency) region than at the basal (high-frequency) region. In addition, for signal frequencies at and above 750 Hz, the slope of the masking function changed from a value much greater than 1.0 to a value of 1.0 at high levels. The change in slope was better correlated with signal sensation level (i.e., amount of masking) than with either signal or masker SPL: the lack of a change at the lower signal frequencies may reflect the smaller amounts of masking there. The change to a linear growth of masking may represent a change in the response to the signal from compressive to linear at high levels.
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