Abstract

For normal listeners, difference limens for intensity (DLs) for Gaussian-shaped tone pulses are largest at medium pulse durations (corresponding to about five cycles of the tonal carrier) when the pedestals are 10 dB above threshold, either in quiet or in a pink noise background. One explanation for this is that worst performance occurs when the internal representation of the tone pulses is most compact in time and frequency, affording minimal opportunity for ‘multiple looks’ (Van Schijndel et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 105 (1999) 3425–3435). However, the mid-duration worsening is largest for medium overall levels, suggesting an involvement of compression on the basilar membrane (BM), which is also greatest at medium levels (Baer et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 106 (1999) 1907–1916). If this is so, the mid-duration worsening should be reduced when BM compression is reduced by outer hair cell damage. To test this, subjects with sensorineural hearing losses were tested using 1-kHz or 4-kHz Gaussian-shaped tone pulses, in quiet or in pink noise that raised thresholds by 10–20 dB. For subjects with mild losses, poorest performance was sometimes found for medium durations. For more severe losses, intensity DLs tended to improve monotonically or remain roughly constant with increasing duration. Performance overall tended to be better for subjects with greater hearing losses. The results are more consistent with an explanation based on BM compression than with an explanation based on multiple looks.

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