Darwin C J, Hukin R W, al-Khatib B Y
University of Sussex, Brighton, England.
J Acoust Soc Am. 1995 Aug;98(2 Pt 1):880-5. doi: 10.1121/1.413513.
Evidence is presented that sequential auditory grouping constraints apply to the perception of pitch. Experiment 1 shows that the pitch changes produced by mistuning the fourth harmonic of a 90-ms 12-harmonic 155-Hz fundamental complex tone are substantially reduced when the complex is preceded by four 90-ms tones at the same frequency as the mistuned component. Both the pitch changes and their reduction by the tonal sequence precursor remain when the mistuned component and the precursor are presented contralateral to the remaining components. Experiment 2 shows that reducing the level of the same mistuned component reduces the size of the pitch change, but only if the mistuned component is presented ipsilaterally. To the extent that adaptation can be equated with a physical reduction in level, this result provides further evidence against peripheral adaptation playing a significant role in the auditory grouping of harmonics in pitch perception.