Abstract
The precedence effect for transient sounds has been proposed to be based primarily on monaural processes, manifested by asymmetric temporal masking. This study explored the potential for monaural explanations with longer (“ongoing”) sounds exhibiting the precedence effect. Transient stimuli were single lead-lag noise burst pairs; ongoing stimuli were trains of 63 burst pairs. Unlike with transients, monaural masking data for ongoing sounds showed no advantage for the lead, and are inconsistent with asymmetric audibility as an explanation for ongoing precedence. This result, along with supplementary measurements of interaural time discrimination, suggests different explanations for transient and ongoing precedence.
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CITATION STYLE
Freyman, R. L., Morse-Fortier, C., Griffin, A. M., & Zurek, P. M. (2018). Can monaural temporal masking explain the ongoing precedence effect? The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 143(2), EL133–EL139. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.5024687
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