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Binaural fusion with ecologically valid stimuli

Binaural fusion, or the perception of a single auditory “image” can arise from simultaneous inputs across ears. Fusion is fundamental to binaural abilities, including sound source localization. One potent determiner of degree of fusion is the interaural correlation of the binaurally presented wavefo...

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Published in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2023-10, Vol.154 (4_supplement), p.A71-A71
Main Authors: Aronoff, Justin, BK, Prajna, Soleimanifar, Simin, Bernstein, Leslie
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Language:English
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container_issue 4_supplement
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container_title The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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creator Aronoff, Justin
BK, Prajna
Soleimanifar, Simin
Bernstein, Leslie
description Binaural fusion, or the perception of a single auditory “image” can arise from simultaneous inputs across ears. Fusion is fundamental to binaural abilities, including sound source localization. One potent determiner of degree of fusion is the interaural correlation of the binaurally presented waveforms. Noise waveforms can be used to manipulate the interaural correlation, but the normalized correlation of the envelopes of such noises is limited to between 1.0 and 0.785 (π/4). As a result of differing properties between noises and speech, pairs of speech sounds can be generated having normalized interaural envelope correlations well below 0.785. We measured cochlear implant users’ perceived degree of binaural fusion while varying the interaural correlation of speech-like signals from 0.4 to 1.0. Stimuli were generated using speech-based envelopes from multi-channel vocoders that modulated 1000 pulse-per-second pulse trains. Envelopes derived from different vocoder channels were extracted to yield interaural correlations that varied over a wider range than would be possible using noises. Preliminary results suggest that the speech-based stimuli, while differing qualitatively from noises and being more ecologically valid, yield similar effects of interaural correlation on binaural fusion, while allowing a larger range of interaural correlations to be employed.
doi_str_mv 10.1121/10.0022834
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title Binaural fusion with ecologically valid stimuli
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