change style to default Text Only
Previous Article
Method and Apparatus for Surface Ultrasound Imaging
Next Article
Errors due to sensor and position mismatch in planar acoustic holography
There are many sources of measurement errors when one attempts to construct a hologram of near-field acoustic holography. These errors are amplified when predicting pressure at a point which is locate...

You are not logged in to this journal. Log in

The precedence effect

J. Acoust. Soc. Am. Volume 106, Issue 4, pp. 1633-1654 (October 1999)

Issue Date: October 1999
Buy This PDF   (US$25)
Download PDF (341 kB) View Cart
Ruth Y. Litovsky and H. Steven Colburn
Hearing Research Center and Department of Biomedical Engineering, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215

William A. Yost and Sandra J. Guzman
Parmly Hearing Institute, Loyola University Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60201
In a reverberant environment, sounds reach the ears through several paths. Although the direct sound is followed by multiple reflections, which would be audible in isolation, the first-arriving wavefront dominates many aspects of perception. The "precedence effect" refers to a group of phenomena that are thought to be involved in resolving competition for perception and localization between a direct sound and a reflection. This article is divided into five major sections. First, it begins with a review of recent work on psychoacoustics, which divides the phenomena into measurements of fusion, localization dominance, and discrimination suppression. Second, buildup of precedence and breakdown of precedence are discussed. Third measurements in several animal species, developmental changes in humans, and animal studies are described. Fourth, recent physiological measurements that might be helpful in providing a fuller understanding of precedence effects are reviewed. Fifth, a number of psychophysical models are described which illustrate fundamentally different approaches and have distinct advantages and disadvantages. The purpose of this review is to provide a framework within which to describe the effects of precedence and to help in the integration of data from both psychophysical and physiological experiments. It is probably only through the combined efforts of these fields that a full theory of precedence will evolve and useful models will be developed. ©1999 Acoustical Society of America.
History: Received 20 April 1998; revised 9 April 1999; accepted 23 June 1999
Permalink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.427914

KEYWORDS and PACS

Keywords
PACS
  • 43.10.Ln
    Acoustics General Surveys and tutorial papers; historical and philosophical literature
  • 43.71.An
    Acoustics Speech perception Models and theories of speech perception
  • 43.71.Bp
    Acoustics Speech perception Perception of voice and talker characteristics
  • YEAR: 1999

PUBLICATION DATA

ISSN:
0001-4966 (print)  
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef ASA

REFERENCES (128)

For access to fully linked references, you need to log in. For access to fully linked references, you need to Log in.

CITING ARTICLES

For access to citing articles, you need to log in.
For access to citing articles, you need to Log in.

©  Acoustical Society of America