The effects of unmodulated carrier fringes on the detection of frequency modulation

Detection thresholds for 100 ms of either 5- or 20-Hz frequency modulation (FM) were measured at various temporal positions within a 600-ms, 4-kHz pure-tone carrier. The results indicated that the temporal position of the signal relative to the fringe influences detection thresholds, including an ef...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2013-02, Vol.133 (2), p.998-1003
Hauptverfasser: Byrne, Andrew J, Viemeister, Neal F, Stellmack, Mark A
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Detection thresholds for 100 ms of either 5- or 20-Hz frequency modulation (FM) were measured at various temporal positions within a 600-ms, 4-kHz pure-tone carrier. The results indicated that the temporal position of the signal relative to the fringe influences detection thresholds, including an effect that is reminiscent of auditory backward recognition masking. A task involving frequency increments, rather than sinusoidal FM, yielded similar results. Additional manipulation of total carrier duration indicated that FM detection thresholds improve as the duration of the forward fringe increases, while a backward fringe only degrades performance in the absence of any forward fringe. The results suggest that listeners are insensitive to subtle frequency changes that occur at the onset of a longer stimulus and that the interaction between the opposing effects of the forward and backward fringes is not additive.
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/1.4773353