Abstract
When a complex tone contains many harmonics, its pitch is usually determined by harmonics in a restricted frequency region, called the "dominant region," which for fundamental frequencies (FOs) ≥ 100 Hz corresponds to low, resolved harmonics. We estimated the dominant region for tones with low FO, by measuring thresholds, FODLs, for detecting a change in FO of a group of harmonics embedded within harmonics with fixed FO. The spectral position of the shifted group was systematically varied. Components were added in either cosine or random phase. For FOs of 35 and 50 Hz, the position of the dominant region depended strongly on the relative phases of the components. When the envelope had a low peak factor, with multiple peaks per period (random phase), the dominant region fell at low harmonic numbers (for FO - 50 Hz), or was not well defined (for FO - 35 Hz). When the envelope had a high peak factor, with one peak per period (cosine phase), the dominant region fell at high harmonic numbers, where harmonics were unresolved. Generally, performance was better for cosine than for random phase. The results indicate that harmonics in the dominant region are not always resolved. ©2009 The Acoustical Society of Japan.
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Miyazono, H., Glasberg, B. R., & Moore, B. C. J. (2009). Dominant region for pitch at low fundamental frequencies (fo): The effect of fundamental frequency, phase and temporal structure. Acoustical Science and Technology, 30(3), 161–169. https://doi.org/10.1250/ast.30.161
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