Abstract

Research on informational masking for nonspeech stimuli has focused on the effects of spectral uncertainty in the masker. In this letter, results are presented from some preliminary probe experiments in which the spectrum of the masker is held fixed but the spatial properties of the masker are randomized. In addition, in some tests, the overall level of the stimulus is randomized. These experiments differ from previous experiments that have measured the effect of spatial uncertainty on masking in that the only attributes (aside from level) that distinguish the target from the masker are the spatial attributes; in all of the tests, the target and masker were statistically identical, statistically independent, narrowband noise signals. In general, the results indicate that detection performance is degraded by spatial uncertainty in the masker but that compared both to the effects of spectral uncertainty and to the effects of overall-level uncertainty, the effects of spatial uncertainty are relatively small.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call