Abstract

The effect of the temporal relationship between a pure-tone masker and a pure-tone signal in simultaneous masking was investigated in three experiments. The experiments extend previous work by: studying the temporal effect over a wide range of signal frequencies, studying the change in masking over time for several masker/signal frequency ratios, and studying the growth of masking for a brief signal at different temporal positions within a longer duration masker. In the first experiment, threshold was measured for a 20-ms signal temporally centered in a masker whose duration ranged from 20 ms to continuous. Signal frequency (fs) was 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, or 8.0 kHz; masker frequency (fm) was 1.2 fs. For all signal frequencies, the amount of masking decreased as masker duration increased. In the second experiment, threshold was measured for a 20-ms, 1.0-kHz signal as a function of the signal's temporal position within a 400-ms masker whose frequency ranged from 1.0 to 1.25 kHz. For all but the 1.0-kHz masker, for which threshold was almost independent of the signal's temporal position, threshold decreased as signal onset was delayed relative to masker onset, but then increased slightly as the signal approached masker offset. In the final experiment, growth-of-masking functions were measured for a 20-ms, 1.0-kHz signal positioned at the beginning, at the temporal center, or at the end of a 400-ms masker whose frequency was 1.20 or 1.25 kHz. The masking functions generally were steepest for a signal at the onset of the masker and, for a given temporal position, steepest for the 1.20-kHz masker.

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