Kresge Hearing Research Institute, University of Michigan Medical School, 1150 W. Medical Center Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-5616, USA; National Centre for Audiology, Western University, 1201 Western Road, London, Ontario, Canada N6G 1H1.
Hear Res. 2013 Dec;306:76-92. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2013.09.007. Epub 2013 Sep 27.
For human listeners, the primary cues for localization in the vertical plane are provided by the direction-dependent filtering of the pinnae, head, and upper body. Vertical-plane localization generally is accurate for broadband sounds, but when such sounds are presented at near-threshold levels or at high levels with short durations (<20 ms), the apparent location is biased toward the horizontal plane (i.e., elevation gain <1). We tested the hypothesis that these effects result in part from distorted peripheral representations of sound spectra. Human listeners indicated the apparent position of 100-ms, 50-60 dB SPL, wideband noise-burst targets by orienting their heads. The targets were synthesized in virtual auditory space and presented over headphones. Faithfully synthesized targets were interleaved with targets for which the directional transfer function spectral notches were filled in, peaks were leveled off, or the spectral contrast of the entire profile was reduced or expanded. As notches were filled in progressively or peaks leveled progressively, elevation gain decreased in a graded manner similar to that observed as sensation level is reduced below 30 dB or, for brief sounds, increased above 45 dB. As spectral contrast was reduced, gain dropped only at the most extreme reduction (25% of normal). Spectral contrast expansion had little effect. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that loss of representation of spectral features contributes to reduced elevation gain at low and high sound levels. The results also suggest that perceived location depends on a correlation-like spectral matching process that is sensitive to the relative, rather than absolute, across-frequency shape of the spectral profile.
对于人类听众来说,垂直平面定位的主要线索是耳廓、头部和上半身的方向相关滤波。垂直平面定位通常适用于宽带声音,但当这些声音以接近阈值的水平或以短持续时间(<20ms)呈现时,明显的位置会偏向水平平面(即,仰角增益<1)。我们测试了以下假设:这些效应部分是由于声音频谱的失真的外围表示。人类听众通过头部定向来指示 100ms、50-60dB SPL、宽带噪声突发目标的明显位置。目标在虚拟听觉空间中合成,并通过耳机呈现。真实合成的目标与定向传递函数频谱凹口填充、峰值平滑或整个轮廓的频谱对比度减小或增大的目标交错。随着凹口的逐渐填充或峰值的逐渐平滑,仰角增益以类似于观察到的低于 30dB 的感觉水平或对于短暂声音高于 45dB 的方式逐渐减小。随着光谱对比度的降低,增益仅在最极端的降低(正常的 25%)时下降。光谱对比度扩展几乎没有影响。结果与以下假设一致:频谱特征表示的丧失导致在低和高声级时仰角增益降低。结果还表明,感知位置取决于类似于相关的光谱匹配过程,该过程对频谱轮廓的相对而非绝对的跨频率形状敏感。