A pointing technique for rapidly collecting localization responses in auditory research

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Abstract

A technique is described for rapidly collecting responses in auditory-localization experiments. Subjects indicate the perceived direction of the sound by pointing at a 20-cm-diam spherical model. In Experiment 1, the subjects judged the direction of a broadband signal, which could originate from any of 239 directions ranging through 360° of azimuth and between -45° and +90° of elevation. Using this technique, the subjects responded 2-8 times more rapidly than previous subjects who used either a verbal-reporting technique or a head-pointing technique. Localization judgments were as accurate as they had been with verbal reports, but were not as accurate as judgments collected using the head-pointing technique. In Experiment 2, the signal was turned off and the experimenter read the spherical coordinates of the signal location to the subjects. The subjects pointed to these coordinates more accurately than they had judged the direction of the sounds in Experiment 1, suggesting that the response technique had not been the limiting factor in that experiment. Circumstances relevant to the choice of response techniques for auditory-localization experiments are discussed. © 1995 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Gilkey, R. H., Good, M. D., Ericson, M. A., Brinkman, J., & Stewart, J. M. (1995). A pointing technique for rapidly collecting localization responses in auditory research. Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, & Computers, 27(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03203614

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