Measuring the difference limen for identification of order of onset for complex auditory stimuli

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Abstract

The approximately 20-msec perceptual threshold for identifying order of onset for components of auditory stimuli has been considered both as a possible factor contributing to the perception of voicing contrasts in speech and as no more than a methodological artifact. In the present research, we investigate the identification of the temporal order of onset of spectral components in terms of the first of a sequence of thresholds for complex stimuli (modeled after consonant-vowel [CV] syllables) that vary in degree of onset. The results provide clear evidence that the difference limen (DL) for discriminating differences in onset time follows predictions based on a fixed perceptual threshold or limit at relatively short onset differences. Furthermore, the DL seems to be a function of context coding of stimulus information, with both the DL and absolute threshold probably reflecting limits on the effective perception and coding of the short-term stimulus spectrum.

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Pastore, R. E., & Farrington, S. M. (1996). Measuring the difference limen for identification of order of onset for complex auditory stimuli. Perception and Psychophysics, 58(4), 510–526. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03213087

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