Abstract

Three experiments investigated the role of pre/post exposure to a masker in a detection task with complex, random, spectro-temporal maskers. In the first experiment, the masker was either continuously presented or pulsed on and off with the signal. For most listeners, thresholds were lower when the masker was continuously presented, despite the fact that there was more uncertainty about the timing of the signal. In the second experiment, the signal-bearing portion of the masker was preceded and followed by masker "fringes" of different durations. Consistent with the findings of Experiment 1, for some listeners shorter-duration fringes led to higher thresholds than long-duration fringes. In the third experiment, the masker fringe (a) preceded, (b) followed, or (c) both preceded and followed, the signal. Relative to the middle signal conditions, a late signal yielded lower thresholds and the early signal yielded higher thresholds. These results indicate that listeners can use features of an ongoing sound to extract an added signal and that listeners differ in the importance of pre-exposure for efficient signal extraction. However, listeners do not appear to perform this comparison retrospectively after the signal, potentially indicating a form of backward masking.

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