Midterm Flashcards

1
Q

Fletcher

A
  • 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)
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2
Q

Fechner

A
  • 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”
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3
Q

minimum audible pressure (MAP)

A
  • monaural
  • sound pressure at the level of the TM w a mic in the ear canal
  • dashed line
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4
Q

minimum audible field (MAF)

A
  • binaural
  • measurement of sound level is made after the listener is removed from the sound field
  • solid line
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5
Q

Viemeister and Wakefield

A
  • 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
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6
Q

Levitt’s procedure

A
  • 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
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7
Q

Marshal and Jesteadt

A
  • 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)
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8
Q

sensitivity

A

likelihood of identifying someone w the disease

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9
Q

specificity

A

the fraction of correctly identifying (normal)

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10
Q

step function

A

ideal psychometric function

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11
Q

resonance or place theory

A

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

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12
Q

frequency theory

A

a complete time domain representation of the incoming waveform is directly encoded in the pattern of firings of the aud nerve

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13
Q

Zwicker

A

changes in excitation pattern when frequency is changed

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14
Q

Siebert

A

takes into account statistical variability of the neural representation of the signal (can’t account for frequency effect)

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15
Q

Luce & Green

A

looked at multimodal aud nerve fiber histograms to estimate the period of the signal (can’t account for SL effect)

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16
Q

Stevens

A

long duration tones below 1000 Hz decrease in pitch with increasing intensity and tone above 2000 Hz increase in pitch

17
Q

Rossing & Houtsma

A

40 ms bursts decrease in pitch with intensity for frequencies of 200-3200 Hz

18
Q

Doughty & Garner

A

12ms bursts

19
Q

pattern recognition

A

assumes pitch of a complex tone is derived from neural information about the frequencies/pitches of individual partials

20
Q

temporal model

A

pitch of a complex tone is related to time intervals between nerve spikes in the 8th nerve, or the periodicity of the total waveform

21
Q

Ritsma

A

found that pitch is dominated by the 3rd - 5th harmonics when F0 is around 100-400 Hz