With one ear occluded, 17 listeners were asked to locate tone bursts, .25, 4, .6, .9. l.4, 2.0, 3.2, 4.8, and 7.2 kHz, generated by a loudspeaker concealed from view. The S's response was to callout that number, from a series of numbers arranged horizontally, behind which he thought the tone bursts originated. The listeners perceived the sounds as emanating from the side of the unoccluded ear, but their judgments bore no consistent relation to the actual location of the sound source. Rather, the listeners showed a strong tendency to locate a tone burst, within the range of .9 through 7.2 kHz, in a fixed spatial relation to the next higher- and lower-pitched tone burst. Distorting the pinna of the unoccluded ear failed to modify the perceptual pattern. It was suggested that the perceived spatial relations among the various frequencies was a by-product of the tonotopic organization of the auditory nervous system. © 1971 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Butler, R. A. (1971). The monaural localization of tonal stimuli. Perception & Psychophysics, 9(1), 99–101. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03213038
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