Abstract

Two experiments investigated how listeners allocate their attention to different segments of a temporal pattern. The experiments allowed a direct test of the predictions of the Proportion of Total Duration (PTD) rule and the Component Relative Entropy (CoRE) model. Listeners had to decide whether two sequences of nine tones had the same or different temporal patterns (tone duration = 25 ms, tone frequency = 1000 Hz). A sequence's temporal pattern was determined by the time intervals between each tone's offset and the next tone's onset. On same trials, the time intervals at corresponding temporal positions in the two sequences were identical. On different trials, the corresponding time intervals were randomly varied. Listener attention to different temporal positions within a sequence was assessed by calculating the decision weights at each position. The results supported the CoRE model and were inconsistent with the PTD rule. Manipulating the mean of the time intervals within the sequence had no consistent effect on the pattern of weights (or on overall performance), indicating that listener attention was not affected by either the proportion of total duration or the perceptual salience of a longer or shorter time interval. However, manipulating the variance of the time intervals had a significant effect: the highest weight was given to the highest variance segment. This weighting strategy leads to better performance because higher variance segments are more diagnostic of whether the sequences are the same or different.

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