LATERALIZATION OF A PERTURBED HARMONIC - EFFECTS OF ONSET ASYNCHRONY AND MISTUNING

Authors
Citation
Ni. Hill et Cj. Darwin, LATERALIZATION OF A PERTURBED HARMONIC - EFFECTS OF ONSET ASYNCHRONY AND MISTUNING, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 100(4), 1996, pp. 2352-2364
Citations number
43
Categorie Soggetti
Acoustics
ISSN journal
00014966
Volume
100
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Part
1
Pages
2352 - 2364
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-4966(1996)100:4<2352:LOAPH->2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
The lateralization paradigm of Trahiotis and Stern [C. Trahiotis and R . M. Stern, J. Acoust. Sec. Am. 86, 1285-1293 (1989)] was extended to investigate the influence of a spectrally flanking complex on the late ral position of a perturbed harmonic. When a complex tone consisting o f harmonics 2 through 8 of 100 Hz was presented with an interaural tim e difference (ITD) of 1.5 ms, the complex was heard on the leading sid e (experiment I). However, when the 500-Hz component had a later onset time than the other components (experiments 1 and 2) or was mistuned (experiment 3), it was perceived to be in a different lateral position to the complex. The complex still maintained a residual influence on the lateralization of the pure tone even for the largest asynchrony us ed (experiment 4). Experiment 5 confirmed that the lateralization of t he tonal complex was consistent with the aggregation of binaural infor mation across frequency. The results suggest that across-frequency int egration of interaural-timing information is influenced by onset-async hrony and harmonicity. (C) 1996 Acoustical Society of America.