Abstract

In this paper the effect of temporal modulation reduction on spectral contrasts is investigated. First, a spectral modulation transfer function (SMTF) is presented as a method to measure the transfer of spectral ripples (sinusoidal periods/oct) in the short-time spectral envelope by comparing the spectral modulation depth of original and processed speech fragments. Measuring the SMTF for speech subjected to uniform reduction of the temporal modulation depth (i.e., modulation-frequency-independent reduction) in 24 1/4-oct bands showed an almost equal uniform reduction of the spectral modulations. Furthermore, the SMTF was used to measure the reduction of spectral contrasts associated with low-pass and high-pass temporal-envelope filtering [Drullman et al., J. Acoust. Soc. Am.95, 1053-1064 and 2670-2680 (1994a, b)]. For a perceptual evaluation, sentences were processed to reduce spectral contrasts and the speech-reception threshold (SRT) in noise was measured with ten normal-hearing subjects. Comparison of the results with those obtained previously after temporal-envelope filtering revealed that the SRT-effect of temporal high-pass filtering can be completely accounted for by the associated reduction of spectral contrasts. However, this relationship cannot be demonstrated conclusively in the case of temporal low-pass filtering.

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