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Related Experiment Videos

Auditory induction: reciprocal changes in alternating sounds

R M Warren1, J A Bashford, E W Healy

  • 1Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 53201.

Perception & Psychophysics
|March 1, 1994
PubMed
Summary
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Auditory induction can alter the perceived loudness and timbre of sounds, even when the induced sound is not fully perceived as continuous. These findings challenge traditional views of auditory induction as an all-or-none effect.

Area of Science:

  • Auditory Perception
  • Psychoacoustics
  • Signal Processing

Background:

  • Perceptual restoration explains how missing sound fragments are filled in, creating apparent continuity.
  • Auditory induction, pulsation threshold, and phonemic restoration paradigms investigate this phenomenon.
  • Previous research focused on the induced sound (inducee), neglecting changes in the inducing sound (inducer).

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate concomitant changes in the inducing sound during auditory induction.
  • To examine loudness, duration, and timbre alterations in the inducer.
  • To challenge the conventional all-or-none view of auditory induction.

Main Methods:

  • Alternating inducer and inducee sounds (e.g., tone/tone, noise/noise, noise/speech).

Related Experiment Videos

  • Assessing perceived continuity of the inducee.
  • Measuring changes in the loudness, apparent duration, and timbre of the inducer.
  • Main Results:

    • Inducer loudness decreased across various sound pairs (tone/tone, noise/noise, noise/speech).
    • Loudness reductions occurred even when the inducee was perceived as discontinuous.
    • Graded increases in inducee apparent duration accompanied inducer loudness decreases.
    • Significant alterations in inducer timbre were observed, particularly with same-frequency tones of different intensities.

    Conclusions:

    • Auditory induction influences the perceived characteristics of the inducing sound, not just the induced sound.
    • The phenomenon is not strictly all-or-none, showing graded effects.
    • Anomalous auditory residues may occur, altering the inducer's perceived quality beyond simple subtraction.