Abstract

The effects of intensity on the difference limen for frequency (DLF) in normal-hearing and in hearing-impaired listeners are incorporated into the temporal model of frequency discrimination proposed by Goldstein and Srulovicz [Psychophysics and Physiology of Hearing, edited by E. F. Evans and J.P. Wilson (Academic, New York, 1977)]. A simple extension of the temporal mode, which includes the dependence of phase locking on intensity, is sufficient to predict the effects of intensity on the DLF in normal-hearing listeners. To account for elevated DLFs in hearing-impaired listeners the impairment is modeled as a reduction in the synchrony of the discharge from VIIIth-nerve fibers that innervate the region of hearing loss. Constraints on the optimal processor and the validity of the temporal model at high frequencies are discussed.

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