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Just Noticeable Differences for Changes of Interaural Time Differences as a Function of Interaural Time Differences

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1959
The just noticeable differences for changes of interaural time differences between two bursts of noise were investigated as a function of the interaural time difference of the first (reference) burst. Four normal hearing subjects listened through earphones to time differences between ears which were varied by electrical means.
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Individual Differences in Sensitivity to Interaural Differences in Time and Level

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1973
Previous research had indicated the existence of two groups—people more sensitive to interaural time differences than to interaural level (intensity) differences and people more sensitive to level differences than to time differences. A population of undergraduates was surveyed in an attempt to estimate the relative proportions of people in the two ...
D, McFadden, L A, Jeffress, W E, Russell
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Measurements of Interaural Time- and Intensity-Differences

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1955
Measurements of interaural time-differences and of interaural intensity-differences have been made, employing five subjects and a variety of azimuth positions for the sound source. The time measurements were made using clicks from a movable loudspeaker.
W. E. Feddersen   +3 more
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Detection of sinusoidally modulated interaural time differences

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1976
These experiments were designed to determine the capability of the binaural system to detect sinusoidally modulated interaural time differences. In the first experiments observers were required to discriminate sinusoidally frequency-modulated (FM) tones whose modulation frequencies were interaurally in phase (diotic) from the same FM tones with the ...
D. Wesley Grantham, Frederic L. Wightman
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Binaural Vector Model: Relative Interaural Time Differences

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1966
Further computations on the binaural vector model have been carried out [H. Levitt and E. A. Lundry, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 39, 1232(A) (1966), and references cited therein]. The cumulative probability distribution of the phase angle between the left- and right-ear resultant vectors has been computed for the case where either the noise or the signal has ...
H. Levitt, E. A. Lundry
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Interaural Time Difference Prediction Using Anthropometric Interaural Distance

Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, 2022
Jaan Johansson   +3 more
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Optimal codes for processing interaural time differences.

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2010
It has been argued that a graded code with two populations of neurons tuned at two symmetrical delays is optimal for ITD estimation. However, this theoretical result critically relies on the assumption that the only source of uncertainty is the randomness of spiking, while the source signal is fixed (a pure tone).
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Auditory spatial attention using interaural time differences.

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2000
Previous probe-signal studies of auditory spatial attention have shown faster responses to sounds at an expected versus an unexpected location, making no distinction between the use of interaural time difference (ITD) cues and interaural-level difference cues.
A J, Sach, N I, Hill, P J, Bailey
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The problem of different interaural time differences at different frequencies

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1981
Recent research reveals that the interaural time difference produced by a sound source located off the median plane of the body is not frequency independent. The problem this poses for the auditory nervous system is discussed.
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Detectability of Interaural Time Differences and Interaural Level Differences as a Function of Signal Duration

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1972
Detectability was measured as a function of signal duration for a dichotic condition in which there was only an interaural difference in level and for one in which there was only an interaural difference in time. For four subjects, performance improved as duration increased, and it did so in essentially the same way for the two dichotic conditions ...
Dennis McFadden, Alan D. Sharpley
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