Perrott D R, Costantino B, Ball J
Psychoacoustics Laboratory, California State University, Los Angeles 90032.
J Acoust Soc Am. 1993 Feb;93(2):1053-7. doi: 10.1121/1.405553.
Grantham [Grantham, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 79, 1939-1949 (1986)] has proposed that subjects are able to resolve the velocity of a moving sound source simply by determining the distance traveled and the time required to complete the movement. In the current experiment, subjects were able to discriminate between accelerated and decelerated movements which were identical on both parameters; that is, the accelerated and decelerated movements began and ended at the same locus and required the same amount of time to be completed. The minimum duration required to discriminate between these two movement patterns was 310 and 90 ms, respectively, for displacements of 9 degrees and 18 degrees. These results suggest that, under some conditions, the perception of velocity in the auditory modality may be based upon something more than a simple comparison of the total distance traveled and the time required to complete the movement.