Abstract

As a vibrator needs to be pressed onto the osseous parts of the head, bone conduction is often accompanied by pain and esthetic problems. To solve these problems, a “distant presentation” that involves presenting vibrators to the neck, trunk, or upper limb was proposed. Our previous studies focused on the perceptual and propagation characteristics of distantly presented bone-conducted sounds in the ultrasonic range. However, only a few studies have been conducted in the audible-frequency range. In this study, to examine the basic properties of distantly presented bone-conduction perception in the audible-frequency range, hearing thresholds, difference limens for frequency, and temporal modulation transfer functions were measured with insulated air-conducted sounds. The results indicate that the distance attenuation is much larger than that in the ultrasonic range, and the degradation of frequency and temporal information occurring in the propagation process of bone-conducted sounds is sufficiently small for the transmission of sound information.

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