Grantham D W
J Acoust Soc Am. 1986 Jun;79(6):1939-49. doi: 10.1121/1.393201.
Three experiments investigated subjects' ability to detect and discriminate the simulated horizontal motion of auditory targets in an anechoic environment. "Moving" stimuli were produced by dynamic application of stereophonic balancing algorithms to a two-loudspeaker system with a 30 degree separation. All stimuli were 500-Hz tones. In experiment 1, subjects had to discriminate a left-to-right moving stimulus from a stationary stimulus pulsed for the same duration (300 or 600 ms). For both durations, minimum audible "movement" angles ("MAMA's") were on the order of 5 degrees for stimuli presented at 0 degrees azimuth (straight ahead), and increased to greater than 30 degrees for stimuli presented at +/- 90 degrees azimuth. Experiment 2 further investigated MAMA's at 0 degrees azimuth, employing two different procedures to track threshold: holding stimulus duration constant (at 100-600 ms) while varying velocity; or holding the velocity constant (at 22 degrees-360 degrees/s) while varying duration. Results from the two procedures agreed with each other and with the MAMA's determined by Perrott and Musicant for actually moving sound sources [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 62, 1463-1466 (1977b)]: As stimulus duration decreased below 100-150 ms, the MAMA's increased sharply from 5 degrees-20 degrees or more, indicating that there is some minimum integration time required for subjects to perform optimally in an auditory spatial resolution task. Experiment 3 determined differential "velocity" thresholds employing simulated reference velocities of 0 degrees-150 degrees/s and stimulus durations of 150-600 ms. As with experiments 1 and 2, the data are more easily summarized by considering angular distance than velocity: For a given "extent of movement" of a reference target, about 4 degrees-10 degrees additional extent is required for threshold discrimination between two "moving" targets, more or less independently of stimulus duration or reference velocity. These data suggest that for the range of simulated velocities employed in these experiments, subjects respond to spatial changes--not velocity per se--when presented with a "motion" detection or discrimination task.
三项实验研究了受试者在消声环境中检测和辨别听觉目标模拟水平运动的能力。“移动”刺激是通过将立体声平衡算法动态应用于一个两扬声器系统产生的,两个扬声器之间的夹角为30度。所有刺激均为500赫兹的纯音。在实验1中,受试者必须辨别从左到右移动的刺激与持续时间相同(300或600毫秒)的固定脉冲刺激。对于这两种持续时间,在0度方位角(正前方)呈现的刺激的最小可听“运动”角度(“MAMA”)约为5度,而在±90度方位角呈现的刺激的最小可听“运动”角度增加到大于30度。实验2进一步研究了0度方位角的MAMA,采用了两种不同的程序来跟踪阈值:保持刺激持续时间不变(在100 - 600毫秒),同时改变速度;或者保持速度不变(在22度 - 360度/秒),同时改变持续时间。这两种程序的结果相互一致,并且与Perrott和Musicant针对实际移动声源所确定的MAMA一致[《美国声学学会杂志》62, 1463 - 1466 (1977b)]:当刺激持续时间降至100 - 150毫秒以下时,MAMA从5度急剧增加到20度或更大,这表明受试者在听觉空间分辨率任务中要达到最佳表现需要一些最小整合时间。实验3使用0度 - 150度/秒的模拟参考速度和150 - 600毫秒的刺激持续时间确定了差异“速度”阈值。与实验1和2一样,通过考虑角距离而非速度来更容易总结数据:对于参考目标给定的“运动范围”,两个“移动”目标之间的阈值辨别大约需要额外4度 - 10度的范围,或多或少与刺激持续时间或参考速度无关。这些数据表明,对于这些实验中使用的模拟速度范围,当受试者面对“运动”检测或辨别任务时,他们对空间变化做出反应——而不是对速度本身做出反应。