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      Temporal modulation transfer functions based upon modulation thresholds.

      The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
      Acoustic Stimulation, Auditory Threshold, Humans, Psychoacoustics

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          Abstract

          The detectability of amplitude modulation in the absence of spectral cues provides a quantitative description of temporal resolution for steady-state signals with relatively small amplitude changes. Modulation thresholds for sinusoidally amplitude-modulated wideband noise were measured as a function of modulation frequency. The resulting "Temporal Modulation Transfer Function" (TMTF) shows a lowpass characteristic for modulation frequencies below about 800 Hz. The lowpass characteristic is extended up to approximately 2 kHz when the increment in average power produced by modulation is eliminated. The important parametric effects are summarized as follows: (1) TMTFs are independent of overall level, except at very low intensities; (2) the time constant indicated by the TMTF decreases as the center frequency of the band-limited, modulated noise is increased; (3) modulation thresholds generally decrease with increasing duration of modulation, particularly at low modulation frequencies; (4) when the carrier is gated for the duration of modulation, the TMTF shows a highpass segment at low modulation frequencies. Although the TMTFs are not directly consistent with the attenuation characteristic of a simple lowpass filter, a model which incorporates such a filter, with a time constant of 2.5 ms, describes the entire TMTF and also describes the modulation functions obtained with square-wave and pulse modulation. The wide bandwidth of initial filtering indicated by the model raises the important question of the role of peripheral filtering in determining the detectability of high-frequency modulation.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          500975
          10.1121/1.383531

          Chemistry
          Acoustic Stimulation,Auditory Threshold,Humans,Psychoacoustics
          Chemistry
          Acoustic Stimulation, Auditory Threshold, Humans, Psychoacoustics

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