Ni. Hill et Pj. Bailey, RELATIVE INTENSITY COMPARISONS BETWEEN A TONE AND SPECTRALLY REMOTE NOISE - EFFECTS OF ONSET ASYNCHRONY, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 103(2), 1998, pp. 1075-1079
The present experiment investigated the effect of onset asynchrony on
listeners' ability to make relative intensity comparisons between a 1-
kHz tone and a band of noise high-pass filtered at 3 kHz. In the synch
ronous condition, the tone and noise were gated on and off simultaneou
sly. In the two asynchronous conditions, either the tone was gated on
before the noise or vice versa, both stimuli terminating simultaneousl
y. In the sequential condition, the offset of the tone coincided with
the onset of the noise. The task of the six listeners was to indicate
in which of the two presentation intervals the level of the tone was i
ncremented relative to that of the noise. To deter the use of strategi
es based on successive, within-channel level comparisons, the overall
level of the stimuli was randomized on each presentation. For all list
eners thresholds were lowest in the synchronous condition, and highest
in the sequential condition, the difference ranging from approximatel
y 7 to 18 dB (signal re: pedestal amplitude). Furthermore, five of the
six listeners had significantly lower thresholds in the noise-leading
condition than in the tone-leading condition, the average difference
across listeners being approximately 5 dB. The results are discussed i
n terms of auditory grouping and the possible strategies available to
the listeners. (C) 1998 Acoustical Society of America. [S0001-4966(98)
00202-1].