Abstract
The difference between the binaural and monaural thresholds varies within fairly large limits. Although this binaural-monaural difference may not vary systematically as a function of frequency when pure-tone thresholds are measured in the quiet, the difference varies greatly, as does frequency, when pure tones are presented against a background of noise. Binaural summation, a term which has been used in the past to refer to the phenomenon in which the binaural threshold is lower than the monaural, obtains for masked thresholds only when the phase angles between the two earphones are opposite for the tones and the noise. If the tones and the noise have the same interaural phase angle the binaural threshold is higher than the monaural. This phenomenon, called interaural inhibition, as well as its antipode, interaural summation, is most marked at low frequencies and increases as the intensity of the masking noise is increased. The discussion considers some implications of these findings for the theory of masking and of interaural summation.
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