Abstract

A two-interval, two-alternative temporal forced-choice procedure was used to measure NoSo and NoS pi masked thresholds with 500-Hz and 4-kHz tonal signals. The duration of the signal was either 10, 20, 40, or 320 ms. The maskers were 200-Hz-wide bands of Gaussian noise centered at the frequency of the signal and presented continuously. Decreasing the duration of the 500-Hz tonal signal resulted in a modest increase (1.5 dB or so) in the masking-level difference (MLD) measured between NoSo and NoS pi conditions. In contrast, decreasing the duration of the 4-kHz tonal signal resulted in a substantial decrease (4.5 dB or so) in the MLD. Comparisons of the data with thresholds predicted from analyses based on "windows of temporal integration" provided quantitatively acceptable accounts of the data. The data obtained in the NoS pi condition at 4 kHz, which are novel and were of primary interest, were well-accounted for in a statistical sense. However, there were small, but systematic, discrepancies between the predictions and the data. Those discrepancies, although small in magnitude, suggest that binaural temporal integration at high frequencies, where the envelopes of the stimuli convey the information, may be inherently different from both monaural temporal integration and binaural temporal integration at low frequencies.

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