The contralateral threshold shift was investigated as a function of various parameters of the masking and masked stimuli. Because of a measured high acoustic attenuation between the ears, the threshold shift is interpreted as central masking. Both steady-state and pulsed maskers were used and their effect on the contralateral threshold was determined as a function of the masker intensity, the frequency difference between the masking and masked tones, the time delay from the masker onset, and the duration of an intermittent masker. © 1967 Psychonomic Press, Goleta, Calif.
CITATION STYLE
Zimslocki, J. J., Oamianopoulos, E. N., Buining, E., & Glantz, J. (1967). Central masking: Some steady-state and transient effects. Perception & Psychophysics, 2(2), 59–64. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03212462
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