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- Title
Improving Auditory Filter Estimation by Incorporating Absolute Threshold and a Level-dependent Internal Noise.
- Authors
Toshio Irino; Kenji Yokota; Patterson, Roy D.
- Abstract
Auditory filter (AF) shape has traditionally been estimated with a combination of a notched-noise (NN) masking experiment and a power spectrum model (PSM) of masking. However, there are several challenges that remain in both the simultaneous and forward masking paradigms. We hypothesized that AF shape estimation would be improved if absolute threshold (AT) and a level-dependent internal noise were explicitly represented in the PSM. To document the interaction between NN threshold and AT in normal hearing (NH) listeners, a large set of NN thresholds was measured at four center frequencies (500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz) with the emphasis on low-level maskers. The proposed PSM, consisting of the compressive gammachirp (cGC) filter and three nonfilter parameters, allowed AF estimation over a wide range of frequencies and levels with fewer coefficients and less error than previous models. The results also provided new insights into the nonfilter parameters. The detector signal-to-noise ratio (K) was found to be constant across signal frequencies, suggesting that no frequency dependence hypothesis is required in the postfiltering process. The ANSI standard "Hearing Level-0dB" function, i.e., ATof NH listeners, could be applied to the frequency distribution of the noise floor for the best AF estimation. The introduction of a level-dependent internal noise could mitigate the nonlinear effects that occur in the simultaneous NN masking paradigm. The new PSM improves the applicability of the model, particularly when the sound pressure level of the NN threshold is close to AT.
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL design; HEARING levels; COCHLEA; MASKING (Psychology); NOISE; AUDITORY perception; COMPARATIVE studies; RESEARCH funding; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; ACOUSTIC stimulation; LISTENING
- Publication
Trends in Hearing, 2023, Vol 27, p1
- ISSN
2331-2165
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/23312165231209750