Some effects of auditory grouping factors on modulation detection interference (MDI). |
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Authors: | J W Hall J H Grose |
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Affiliation: | Division of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, University of North Carolina Medical School, Chapel Hill 27599-7070. |
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Abstract: | The ability to detect the existence of amplitude modulation at a target frequency is reduced when amplitude modulation exists at a flanking frequency. This effect has been termed modulation detection interference (MDI) [Yost and Sheft, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 85, 848-857 (1989)]. One explanation for MDI holds that the masking and target frequencies are grouped together by the auditory system such that it is difficult to analyze the modulation at each frequency separately. The present study investigated conditions where the asynchrony of temporal gating of the target and flanking frequencies was manipulated in order to make the frequencies more or less likely to be grouped together by the auditory system and perceived as originating from a single putative source. A second experimental manipulation attempted to perceptually segregate the masking and target frequencies on the basis of harmonicity or spectral proximity. The results of the experiments indicated that manipulations that were intended to enhance the segregation of the masking and target frequencies reduced the magnitude of MDI effects. This generally supported an interpretation that MDI is related in some way to auditory grouping. A final experiment was performed in which the subject had to detect the presence of amplitude modulation, but also had to identify which of two frequency components carried the modulation. Subjects were often poor in discriminating which of two frequencies was amplitude modulated, even when the modulation itself was clearly audible. It was concluded that part of the MDI effect might be due to the poor ability of the auditory system to associate modulation with the carrier of the modulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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