Abstract

Effects of ripple width in rippled-spectrum signals on ripple density resolution was investigated. Two measurement paradigms were tested: (i) ripple density resolution for discrimination between two rippled signals and (ii) discrimination between a rippled test signal and non-rippled reference signal. The ripple widths varied from 9% to 64% of the ripple frequency spacing. For both paradigms, the ripple density resolution increased with deceasing the ripple width. For discrimination between two rippled signals, the resolution was 8.1 ripples/oct for a ripple width of 64% and increased to 15.1 ripples/oct at the ripple width of 9%. For discrimination between a rippled test and non-rippled reference signal, the resolution was 9.3 ripples/oct at a ripple width of 64% and increased to 85 ripples/oct at a ripple width of 9%. Discrimination between two rippled signals is hypothesized to depend on ripple depth in the excitation pattern; the depth increases with narrowing the ripple width. Discrimination between a rippled test and non-rippled reference signal is hypothesized to depend on temporal processing; the effect of the ripple width appears due to increasing the ratio of the autocorrelated to uncorrelated components of the input signal with narrowing the ripples.

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