Abstract

ABSTRACTWe investigated the effect of between and within trial changes in pitch and loudness on the electrodermal orienting reaction (OR), perceptions of movement, and their interaction. First, following 20 habituation trials (6‐s, 80dB, 1000 Hz), four groups of 10 subjects experienced either an increase or a between‐trial decrease in pitch (2000 or 500 Hz) or loudness (90 or 70 dB) on the 21st trial. Second, four additional groups of 20 subjects heard 20 tones that, within each 6‐s trial, either increased or decreased in pitch (500 to 2000 or 2000 to 500 Hz) or loudness (70 to 90 or 90 to 70 dB). During a dishabituation phase each group was split into halves having a nonchanging tone either increasing or decreasing relative to mean pitch or loudness. After each session subjects rated whether they perceived tones as approaching, retreating, or motionless.Compared with groups experiencing constant stimuli, groups presented tones changing within trials had greater skin conductance responses that habituated slower irrespective of direction of change or its perception. During dishabituation a similar number of subjects dishabituated to a stimulus increase as compared to a decrease irrespective of whether the change was in pitch or loudness. Perceptions of movement treated as an independent variable did not predict habituation or dishabituation of the OR. The results generally support Sokolov, and are discussed in relation to hypotheses presented by Sokolov, O'Gorman, and Bernstein.

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