Frequency and amplitude discrimination along the kinesthetic-cutaneous continuum in the presence of masking stimuli

Frequency and amplitude discrimination thresholds along the kinesthetic to cutaneous continuum were evaluated on the left index fingerpad using a multifinger tactual display. Target stimuli were presented either in isolation (no-masker condition) or in the presence of masking stimuli (one- or two-ma...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2006-11, Vol.120 (5), p.2789-2800
Hauptverfasser: Israr, Ali, Tan, Hong Z., Reed, Charlotte M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Frequency and amplitude discrimination thresholds along the kinesthetic to cutaneous continuum were evaluated on the left index fingerpad using a multifinger tactual display. Target stimuli were presented either in isolation (no-masker condition) or in the presence of masking stimuli (one- or two-masker conditions). Six reference target signals in the frequency range 2 - 300 Hz (two each from low-, medium-, and high-frequency regions) and at an amplitude of either 20 or 35 dB sensation levels (SL) were used. In the no-masker condition, the range of frequency Weber fraction was 0.13-0.38 and 0.14-0.28, and the range of amplitude discrimination threshold was 1.82 - 2.98 dB and 1.65 - 2.71 dB , at 20 and 35 dB SL, respectively. In the masking conditions, average frequency Weber fractions rose to 0.60 and 0.46, and average amplitude thresholds rose to 3.63 and 3.72 dB , at 20 and 35 dB SL, respectively. In general, thresholds were largest in the two-masker condition and lowest in the no-masker condition. Although the frequency and amplitude thresholds generally increased in the presence of masking stimuli, there was some indication of channel independence for low- and high-frequency target stimuli. The implications of the results for tactual communication of speech are discussed.
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/1.2354022