Results 181 to 190 of about 35,690 (222)
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Binaural Speech Discrimination

International Journal of Audiology, 1976
The phenomenon of binaural summation in which the addition of signals presented to the two ears simultaneously takes place at a central level, has been known for many years. It is reasonable to assume that the pattern of summation differs between subjects with central lesions and those with lesions in the peripheral auditory tracts.
F J, van Zyl, V J, Brasier
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Speech induced binaural beats: Electrophysiological assessment of binaural interaction

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2021
This paper introduces and evaluates a speech signal manipulation scheme that generates transient speech induced binaural beats (SBBs). These SBBs can only be perceived when different signals are presented dichotically (to both ears). Event-related potentials were recorded in 22 normal-hearing subjects.
Andreas, Schroeer   +4 more
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Binaural suppression of nonechoes

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1992
A brief diotic conditioner has been shown to effectively disrupt lateralization of a brief dichotic probe presented after a short interval (4–10 ms, onset to onset) with an interaural time delay that is clearly discriminable in the absence of the conditioner [e.g., P. M. Zurek, J. Acoust. Soc. Am.
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Binaural edge pitch

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1981
The Huggins pitch effect is created by dichotic broadband noise with interaural phase varying from 0 to 2π over a narrow frequency region. The sensation of pitch, corresponding to the frequency of the phase shift region, is usually understood as the result of a binaural differencing operation. We report here a pitch effect created by dichotic broadband
M A, Klein, W M, Hartmann
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Examination of Binaural Interaction

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1966
The study of binarual interaction may be conveniently divided into three areas: anatomy, physiology, and psychology. These areas, while furnishing large amounts of data, have not yet provided enough information to make possible a complete theory of binarual interaction.
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Binaural signal processing

2011 17th International Conference on Digital Signal Processing (DSP), 2011
The human binaural system has a number of astonishing capabilities that are essential for the formation of our aural worlds. To mimic these, signal-processing models of the binaural system have been built and are constantly improved. In the following, the current state of the art of these models will be reviewed and their potential with respect to ...
Jens Blauert, Jonas Braasch
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Binaural unmasking in infants

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1988
Localization responses to a broadband noise signal presented against a broadband noise masker were obtained from 12-month-old infants and adults. Two loudspeakers, one to the left and one to the right of the listener, continuously presented identical broadband maskers. On a trial, a broadband signal was added to one of the loudspeakers.
B A, Schneider, D, Bull, S E, Trehub
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The threshold for binaural interaction

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1980
The absolute sensitivity of the binaural auditory system was studied by asking subjects to discriminate tones that were truly monaural from dichotic tones that sounded monaural because of an extremely large interaural difference of intensity. Thresholds for this discrimination across the range of frequencies from 250 to 4000 Hz were achieved when the ...
E R, Hafter, P, Kimball
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Binaural modulation masking

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1991
Modulation thresholds were measured in three subjects for a sinusoidalloy amplitude-modulated (SAM) wideband noise (the signal) in the presence of a second amplitude-modulated wideband noise (the masker). In monaural conditions (Mm-Sm) masker and signal were presented to only one ear; in binaural conditions (M0-Sπ) the masker was presented diotically ...
D W, Grantham, S P, Bacon
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A Binaural Integration Test

International Journal of Audiology, 1973
In recent years, disorders involving the central auditory pathways have been investigated using distorted speech material. The methods have included binaural integration tests in which different parts of the same message are presented to the two ears. When investigating the effect of different central pathologies on this integration it is necessary to ...
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