Relationship between psychophysical tuning curves and ’’suppression’’
- 1 October 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Acoustical Society of America (ASA) in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Vol. 66 (4) , 1075-1087
- https://doi.org/10.1121/1.383326
Abstract
This study examined tow-tone unmasking and auditory frequency selectivity about 3 kHz for the purpose of demonstrating a qualitative relationship between the two. An adaptive 2IFC forward-masking procedure was used to collect psychophysical tuning curves (PTC''s) and two-tone masking data under a quiet and noise condition for the same normal-hearing listeners. In the noise condition, a narrowband noise masker, centered 1 decade down from the probe, was gated on with the tonal masker(s). Low-frequency narrowband noise serves to decrease the sharpness of electrophysiological tuning curves by affecting only the tip segments. The data for 4 highly practiced listeners indicate that the gated-noise masker was effective in broadening the PTC''s and in lessening the magnitude of two-tone unmasking. The mutually reflected changes in tuning curves and in two-tone unmasking indicate a close relationship between frequency selectively and unmasking: the greater the magnitude of unmasking above the center frequency of the PTC, the sharper the tuning of the PTC.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: