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Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound

We tested whether sensitivity to acoustic spectrotemporal modulations can be observed from reaction times for normal-hearing and impaired-hearing conditions. In a manual reaction-time task, normal-hearing listeners had to detect the onset of a ripple (with density between 0–8 cycles/octave and a fix...

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Autores principales: Veugen, Lidwien C. E., van Opstal, A. John, van Wanrooij, Marc M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9523861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36172759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23312165221127589
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author Veugen, Lidwien C. E.
van Opstal, A. John
van Wanrooij, Marc M.
author_facet Veugen, Lidwien C. E.
van Opstal, A. John
van Wanrooij, Marc M.
author_sort Veugen, Lidwien C. E.
collection PubMed
description We tested whether sensitivity to acoustic spectrotemporal modulations can be observed from reaction times for normal-hearing and impaired-hearing conditions. In a manual reaction-time task, normal-hearing listeners had to detect the onset of a ripple (with density between 0–8 cycles/octave and a fixed modulation depth of 50%), that moved up or down the log-frequency axis at constant velocity (between 0–64 Hz), in an otherwise-unmodulated broadband white-noise. Spectral and temporal modulations elicited band-pass filtered sensitivity characteristics, with fastest detection rates around 1 cycle/oct and 32 Hz for normal-hearing conditions. These results closely resemble data from other studies that typically used the modulation-depth threshold as a sensitivity criterion. To simulate hearing-impairment, stimuli were processed with a 6-channel cochlear-implant vocoder, and a hearing-aid simulation that introduced separate spectral smearing and low-pass filtering. Reaction times were always much slower compared to normal hearing, especially for the highest spectral densities. Binaural performance was predicted well by the benchmark race model of binaural independence, which models statistical facilitation of independent monaural channels. For the impaired-hearing simulations this implied a “best-of-both-worlds” principle in which the listeners relied on the hearing-aid ear to detect spectral modulations, and on the cochlear-implant ear for temporal-modulation detection. Although singular-value decomposition indicated that the joint spectrotemporal sensitivity matrix could be largely reconstructed from independent temporal and spectral sensitivity functions, in line with time-spectrum separability, a substantial inseparable spectral-temporal interaction was present in all hearing conditions. These results suggest that the reaction-time task yields a valid and effective objective measure of acoustic spectrotemporal-modulation sensitivity.
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spelling pubmed-95238612022-10-01 Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound Veugen, Lidwien C. E. van Opstal, A. John van Wanrooij, Marc M. Trends Hear Original Article We tested whether sensitivity to acoustic spectrotemporal modulations can be observed from reaction times for normal-hearing and impaired-hearing conditions. In a manual reaction-time task, normal-hearing listeners had to detect the onset of a ripple (with density between 0–8 cycles/octave and a fixed modulation depth of 50%), that moved up or down the log-frequency axis at constant velocity (between 0–64 Hz), in an otherwise-unmodulated broadband white-noise. Spectral and temporal modulations elicited band-pass filtered sensitivity characteristics, with fastest detection rates around 1 cycle/oct and 32 Hz for normal-hearing conditions. These results closely resemble data from other studies that typically used the modulation-depth threshold as a sensitivity criterion. To simulate hearing-impairment, stimuli were processed with a 6-channel cochlear-implant vocoder, and a hearing-aid simulation that introduced separate spectral smearing and low-pass filtering. Reaction times were always much slower compared to normal hearing, especially for the highest spectral densities. Binaural performance was predicted well by the benchmark race model of binaural independence, which models statistical facilitation of independent monaural channels. For the impaired-hearing simulations this implied a “best-of-both-worlds” principle in which the listeners relied on the hearing-aid ear to detect spectral modulations, and on the cochlear-implant ear for temporal-modulation detection. Although singular-value decomposition indicated that the joint spectrotemporal sensitivity matrix could be largely reconstructed from independent temporal and spectral sensitivity functions, in line with time-spectrum separability, a substantial inseparable spectral-temporal interaction was present in all hearing conditions. These results suggest that the reaction-time task yields a valid and effective objective measure of acoustic spectrotemporal-modulation sensitivity. SAGE Publications 2022-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9523861/ /pubmed/36172759 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23312165221127589 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Article
Veugen, Lidwien C. E.
van Opstal, A. John
van Wanrooij, Marc M.
Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound
title Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound
title_full Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound
title_fullStr Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound
title_full_unstemmed Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound
title_short Reaction Time Sensitivity to Spectrotemporal Modulations of Sound
title_sort reaction time sensitivity to spectrotemporal modulations of sound
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9523861/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36172759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/23312165221127589
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