Abstract

In order to understand suppression completely it is necessary not only to measure the suppression of one tone by another, but also to measure how the effects of two suppressors combine. The suppression patterns were measured for two suppressor tones individually, and then when both were present simultaneously. These measurements were made for several frequency separations of the two suppressors. Three cases were studied: when both suppressor tones were higher in frequency than the suppressed tone, when both suppressor tones were lower in frequency than the suppressed tone, and when one suppressor tone was higher and one lower in frequency than the suppressed tone. Special attention was given to the conditions where one suppressor suppressed the other. In some cases the suppression caused by a tone can be reduced by suppressing that tone, but in some cases the suppression region of a tone is ineffected by suppressing that tone.

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