Abstract
Measurements of pressure transformation, azimuthal dependence, interaural level difference, and ear canal pressure distribution from 12 studies are brought together in a common framework. The pool of data covers 100 subjects, the majority male, measured in five countries over a 40-yr period. Logical procedures are developed to identify the surfaces which best fit these essentially three-dimensional distributions of data, making allowance for the many disparities between studies. Sheets of data are presented showing transformation to the eardrum, azimuthal dependence, and interaural difference as functions of frequency from 0.2 to 12 kHz at 45° intervals in azimuth. Other sheets show azimuthal dependence and interaural difference as functions of azimuth at 24 discrete frequencies. The logical procedures, data presentations, and review of disparities lead to the construction of self-consistent families of curves best fitting the data and showing the average sound pressure transformation from the free field to the human eardrum as a function of frequency at 15° intervals in azimuth. Possible explanations of differences between studies are suggested.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Shaw, E. A. G. (1974). Transformation of sound pressure level from the free field to the eardrum in the horizontal plane. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 56(6), 1848–1861. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1903522
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