Hearing Research and Theory, Volume 2Academic Press, 1983 - Hearing |
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Page 32
... stimulus , such as a two - tone complex , adapts least of all . It adapts less than an intermittent stimulus with alternating on and off periods , provided that the intermittent stimulus maintains a fairly constant level during the on ...
... stimulus , such as a two - tone complex , adapts least of all . It adapts less than an intermittent stimulus with alternating on and off periods , provided that the intermittent stimulus maintains a fairly constant level during the on ...
Page 51
... stimulus accompanies the steady stimulus and induces loudness adaptation . In vision and taste , fluctuations in the stimulus imposed at the receptor have been shown to reduce adaptation . Involuntary eye movements ( nystagmus ) pre ...
... stimulus accompanies the steady stimulus and induces loudness adaptation . In vision and taste , fluctuations in the stimulus imposed at the receptor have been shown to reduce adaptation . Involuntary eye movements ( nystagmus ) pre ...
Page 64
... stimulus without any transition . The threshold amount of transition was measured using the same three - alternative procedure as for the steady - formant study ; the two reference stimuli of a trial had no formant transition while the ...
... stimulus without any transition . The threshold amount of transition was measured using the same three - alternative procedure as for the steady - formant study ; the two reference stimuli of a trial had no formant transition while the ...
Contents
Does Loudness Adapt? | 2 |
Previous Research | 4 |
Current Research | 19 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
35 dB SPL acoustic afferent amplitude animals auditory nerve auditory nerve fibers auditory system basilar membrane changes chinchilla cochlea combination tones connect-disconnect consonants cues dB SPL dB/octave decrease discrimination duration effects efferent efferent excitation F2 transition Figure filter firing rate formant forward masking frequency selectivity function hair cells hearing impaired hearing loss Hensen's stripe high side high-frequency histograms IHC-TM spacing increase intensity interval Kiang latency loudness adaptation low side low-frequency measured mechanism monaural msec neurons noise exposure nonlinear normal observers obtained octave band organ of Corti pattern physiological postexposure probe frequency probe levels psychophysical tuning curves range region response Salvi sensation level sensorineural hearing loss shown in Fig signal simultaneous masking slope SNHL sound speech spikes/sec spontaneous activity spontaneous rates stereocilia stimulus studies subjects temporal threshold shift tinnitus tion tone burst variable voicing vowel wave Webster Zwislocki