Midterm Flashcards
Fletcher
- cochlea processes frequency info in “chunks along the length of the BM
- proposed that BM can be thought of as a number of narrow bandpass filters arranged serially by frequency
- bandwidth becomes wider as center frequency increases (wider, HF @ base; narrow, LF @ apex)
- hypothesized that if ear presented w 1000 Hz pure-tone, signal would be represented in critical band filter centered at 1000 Hz
- delta F is constant proportion of the CBW - do the traveling waves of the two incoming sounds peak at the same place or close on the BM or in different places? (can’t account for SL)
Fechner
- founder of experimental psychology
- outlined procedures for measurement of thresholds and one approach to scaling
- method of limits, constant stimuli and adjustment
- “the stimulus energy that lifted the sensation… over the threshold of consciousness”
minimum audible pressure (MAP)
- monaural
- sound pressure at the level of the TM w a mic in the ear canal
- dashed line
minimum audible field (MAF)
- binaural
- measurement of sound level is made after the listener is removed from the sound field
- solid line
Viemeister and Wakefield
- multiple looks
- eliminates conflict btwn short time constant for gap detection and long time constant for temporal integration
- predictions of the two models are similar
- if you’re hearing it for a while, you’re getting better at detecting it
Levitt’s procedure
- transformed up-down methods in psychoacoustics
- start at some level above threshold and go down in level after 2 correct responses
- go up in level after each incorrect response
- reversal points will bracket 71% correct
- variation of methods of limits
Marshal and Jesteadt
- tested 4 groups of subjects (young/old; hearing loss/normal)
- tested at HF and LF using standard clinical and adaptive procedures
- Yes-No procedure to measure degree of response bias (pt know’s when the signal was presented)
sensitivity
likelihood of identifying someone w the disease
specificity
the fraction of correctly identifying (normal)
step function
ideal psychometric function
resonance or place theory
the inner ear acts as a tuned resonator which extracts a spectral representation of the incoming sounds which it passes via the aud nerve to the brainstem and the aud cortex
frequency theory
a complete time domain representation of the incoming waveform is directly encoded in the pattern of firings of the aud nerve
Zwicker
changes in excitation pattern when frequency is changed
Siebert
takes into account statistical variability of the neural representation of the signal (can’t account for frequency effect)
Luce & Green
looked at multimodal aud nerve fiber histograms to estimate the period of the signal (can’t account for SL effect)