Abstract

The current ANSI standard (ANSI S3.4, 2007) estimates the loudness of sustained sound, but many naturally occurring sounds have time-varying levels. Glasberg and Moore (2002) published a model for the prediction of time-varying sounds and this aspect should be considered as part of a revision to the ANSI standard. To assess the predictions of the dynamic model, loudness magnitude estimation functions were obtained for 24 listeners using pure tones (0.5 and 1.0 kHz), vowels, spondees, and speech-shaped noise (SSN) presented at levels from 40 to 90 dB SPL. Inferred equal-loudness levels from the fitted loudness functions were compared to the model predictions. The loudness model was qualitatively consistent with the behavioral data. The model predicted SSN to be louder than vowels and spondees which would be louder than tones; however, the model over-predicted the loudness differences. Possible explanations for the over-prediction include biases in loudness judgments, cognitive factors regarding learned expectations for loudness, assumptions regarding the free-field-to-headphone transfer function, and the model’s over-prediction of spectral, loudness summation, a result found recently (Schlittenlacher et al., 2014) for the ANSI standard and DIN 45631.

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