Untrained listeners experience difficulty detecting interaural correlation changes in narrowband noises

  • Goupell M
  • Barrett M
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Abstract

Interaural correlation change detection was measured in untrained normal-hearing listeners. Narrowband (10-Hz) noises were varied by center frequency (CF; 500 or 4000 Hz) and diotic level roving (absent or present). For the 500-Hz CF, 96% of listeners could achieve threshold (79.4% correct at the easiest testing level) if roving was absent, but only 36% of listeners could if level roving was present. No one could achieve threshold at the 4000-Hz CF, unlike trained listeners in the literature. The results raise questions about how individual differences affect learning and generalization of monaural and binaural cues related to interaural correlation detection.

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APA

Goupell, M. J., & Barrett, M. E. (2015). Untrained listeners experience difficulty detecting interaural correlation changes in narrowband noises. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 138(1), EL120–EL125. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4923014

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