Abstract

Comodulation masking release (CMR) is an effect that is associated with auditory sensitivity to coherent amplitude modulations in different frequency regions. The present study investigated if this comodulation is detected by a direct comparison of auditory filter outputs, or if common masker fluctuations are first extracted by a broadly tuned stage that integrates information across a large spectral range. To this end, a modified flanking-band experiment with a narrowband noise masker at the signal frequency (on-frequency masker), and two flanking bands (FBs), one centered below and one above the signal frequency, were used. The center frequencies (CFs) of FBs changed whenever the masker had a local envelope minimum. The center frequencies were randomly chosen from a range of frequencies around the average CF of each FB. A CMR was measured even for large CF variations of FBs, where the envelopes at the off-frequency auditory filters were no longer the same as the masker envelope at the on-frequency auditory filter. This supports the hypothesis of a broadly tuned stage to determine masker comodulation. For two experimental settings, CMR deteriorated for very large variations of CFs of FBs, suggesting a spectral weighting of the off-frequency auditory filters in this broadly tuned stage.

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