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Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection

The subjective representation of the sounds delivered to the two ears of a human listener is closely associated with the interaural delay and correlation of these two-ear sounds. When the two-ear sounds, e.g., arbitrary noises, arrive simultaneously, the single auditory image of the binaurally ident...

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Autores principales: Kong, Lingzhi, Xie, Zilong, Lu, Lingxi, Qu, Tianshu, Wu, Xihong, Yan, Jun, Li, Liang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4488353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26125970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126342
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author Kong, Lingzhi
Xie, Zilong
Lu, Lingxi
Qu, Tianshu
Wu, Xihong
Yan, Jun
Li, Liang
author_facet Kong, Lingzhi
Xie, Zilong
Lu, Lingxi
Qu, Tianshu
Wu, Xihong
Yan, Jun
Li, Liang
author_sort Kong, Lingzhi
collection PubMed
description The subjective representation of the sounds delivered to the two ears of a human listener is closely associated with the interaural delay and correlation of these two-ear sounds. When the two-ear sounds, e.g., arbitrary noises, arrive simultaneously, the single auditory image of the binaurally identical noises becomes increasingly diffuse, and eventually separates into two auditory images as the interaural correlation decreases. When the interaural delay increases from zero to several milliseconds, the auditory image of the binaurally identical noises also changes from a single image to two distinct images. However, measuring the effect of these two factors on an identical group of participants has not been investigated. This study examined the impacts of interaural correlation and delay on detecting a binaurally uncorrelated fragment (interaural correlation = 0) embedded in the binaurally correlated noises (i.e., binaural gap or break in interaural correlation). We found that the minimum duration of the binaural gap for its detection (i.e., duration threshold) increased exponentially as the interaural delay between the binaurally identical noises increased linearly from 0 to 8 ms. When no interaural delay was introduced, the duration threshold also increased exponentially as the interaural correlation of the binaurally correlated noises decreased linearly from 1 to 0.4. A linear relationship between the effect of interaural delay and that of interaural correlation was described for listeners participating in this study: a 1 ms increase in interaural delay appeared to correspond to a 0.07 decrease in interaural correlation specific to raising the duration threshold. Our results imply that a tradeoff may exist between the impacts of interaural correlation and interaural delay on the subjective representation of sounds delivered to two human ears.
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spelling pubmed-44883532015-07-02 Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection Kong, Lingzhi Xie, Zilong Lu, Lingxi Qu, Tianshu Wu, Xihong Yan, Jun Li, Liang PLoS One Research Article The subjective representation of the sounds delivered to the two ears of a human listener is closely associated with the interaural delay and correlation of these two-ear sounds. When the two-ear sounds, e.g., arbitrary noises, arrive simultaneously, the single auditory image of the binaurally identical noises becomes increasingly diffuse, and eventually separates into two auditory images as the interaural correlation decreases. When the interaural delay increases from zero to several milliseconds, the auditory image of the binaurally identical noises also changes from a single image to two distinct images. However, measuring the effect of these two factors on an identical group of participants has not been investigated. This study examined the impacts of interaural correlation and delay on detecting a binaurally uncorrelated fragment (interaural correlation = 0) embedded in the binaurally correlated noises (i.e., binaural gap or break in interaural correlation). We found that the minimum duration of the binaural gap for its detection (i.e., duration threshold) increased exponentially as the interaural delay between the binaurally identical noises increased linearly from 0 to 8 ms. When no interaural delay was introduced, the duration threshold also increased exponentially as the interaural correlation of the binaurally correlated noises decreased linearly from 1 to 0.4. A linear relationship between the effect of interaural delay and that of interaural correlation was described for listeners participating in this study: a 1 ms increase in interaural delay appeared to correspond to a 0.07 decrease in interaural correlation specific to raising the duration threshold. Our results imply that a tradeoff may exist between the impacts of interaural correlation and interaural delay on the subjective representation of sounds delivered to two human ears. Public Library of Science 2015-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC4488353/ /pubmed/26125970 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126342 Text en © 2015 Kong et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kong, Lingzhi
Xie, Zilong
Lu, Lingxi
Qu, Tianshu
Wu, Xihong
Yan, Jun
Li, Liang
Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection
title Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection
title_full Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection
title_fullStr Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection
title_full_unstemmed Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection
title_short Similar Impacts of the Interaural Delay and Interaural Correlation on Binaural Gap Detection
title_sort similar impacts of the interaural delay and interaural correlation on binaural gap detection
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4488353/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26125970
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126342
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