Brightness and loudness as functions of stimulus duration

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Abstract

The brightness of white light and the loudness of white noise were measured by magnitude estimation for sets of stimuli that varied in intensity and duration. Brightness and loudness both grow as power functions of duration up to a critical duration, beyond which apparent magnitude is essentially independent of duration. For brightness, the critical duration decreases with increasing intensity, but for loudness the critical duration is nearly constant at about 150 msec. Loudness and brightness also grow as power functions of intensity. The loudness exponent is the same for all durations, but the brightness exponent is about half again as large for short durations as for long. The psychophysical power functions were used to generate equal-loudness and equal-brightness functions, which specify the combinations of intensity E and duration T that produce the same apparent magnitude. Below the critical duration ET equals k for equal brightness, and ET a equa Is k for equal loudness. The value a is about 0.7 for threshold and about 1.25 for supraliminal loudness. © 1966 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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APA

Stevens, J. C., & Hall, J. W. (1966). Brightness and loudness as functions of stimulus duration. Perception & Psychophysics, 1(5), 319–327. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03207399

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