Abstract
It was examined whether illusory and real continuities induce the frequency-change aftereffect, in which repeated exposure to a frequency sweep results in a shift in the perceived frequency change direction of a subsequent test sound. The magnitude of the aftereffect for different types of adaptors (“real sweep,” “illusory sweep,” and “sweep with gap”) was compared. Listeners judged the direction of a frequency change of the test sound and showed a significant aftereffect only for the “real sweep” adaptors. The results suggest that the illusory sweeps are processed after the stage of frequency-change detection.
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CITATION STYLE
Masutomi, K., & Kashino, M. (2013). Frequency-change aftereffect produced by adaptation to real and illusory unidirectional frequency sweeps. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 134(1), EL14–EL18. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.4807304
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