Effect of masker level on infants’ detection of tones in noise

被引:0
作者
Kathleen M. Berg
Amy E. Boswell
机构
[1] University of Florida,IASCP
来源
Perception & Psychophysics | 1999年 / 61卷
关键词
Temporal Summation; Journal Ofthe Acoustical Society ofAmerica; Masker Level; Adult Listener; Infant Listener;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In adult listeners, the signal-to-noise ratio at masked threshold remains constant with increases in masker level over a wide range of stimulus conditions. This relationship was examined in 7-month-old infants by obtaining masked thresholds for .5- and 4-kHz tones presented in four levels of continuous masking noise. Adults were also tested for comparison. Masker spectrum levels ranged from 5 to 35 dB/Hz for .5-kHz tones, and from −5 to 25 dB/Hz for 4-kHz stimuli. Thresholds were determined for stimuli of both 10 and 100 msec in duration. The results indicated that infants’ performance was more adultlike for 4-kHz stimuli. Although mean thresholds for both 10- and 100-msec, 4-kHz tones were approximately 7 dB higher in infants than in adults, E/N0 at threshold remained essentially constant over the 30-dB range of maskers employed. By contrast, infants’ thresholds for .5-kHz tones were exceptionally high at lower levels of the masker. Threshold E/N0 decreased significantly as masker level increased from 5 to 35 dB/Hz, and this decrease was significantly greater for 10- than for 100-msec stimuli. Temporal summation of .5-kHz tones, measured as the difference between thresholds obtained at the two signal durations, was greater for infants than for adults at low levels of the masker. However, because infants’ thresholds improved more rapidly with level for 10- than for 100-msec tones, age differences in temporal summation were no longer significant when masker spectrum level was 35 dB/Hz. These results suggest that the relationship between signal-to-noise ratio at masked threshold and level of the masker is dependent on both signal frequency and duration during infancy.
引用
收藏
页码:80 / 86
页数:6
相关论文
共 80 条
  • [1] Allen P.(1994)Psychometric functions for children’s detection of tones in noise Journal of Speech & Hearing Research 37 205-215
  • [2] Wightman F.(1994)Adults listen selectively; infants do not Psychological Science 5 170-174
  • [3] Bargones J. Y.(1995)Infant psychometric function for detection: Mechanisms of immature sensitivity Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 98 99-111
  • [4] Werner L. A.(1991)Auditory temporal summation in infants and adults: Effects of stimulus bandwidth and masking noise Perception & Psychophysics 50 314-320
  • [5] Bargones J. Y.(1995)Temporal summation of 500-Hz tones and octave-band noise bursts in infants and adults Perception & Psychophysics 57 183-190
  • [6] Werner L. A.(1998)Infants’ detection of increments in low- and high-frequency noise Perception & Psychophysics 60 1044-1051
  • [7] Marean G. C.(1981)The masking of octave-band noise by broad-spectrum noise: A comparison of infant and adult thresholds Perception & Psychophysics 30 101-106
  • [8] Berg K. M.(1986)Detection of tones in noise and the “severe departure” from Weber’s law Journal of the AcousticalSociety of America 79 461-464
  • [9] Berg K. M.(1996)The lack of frequency dependence of thresholds for short tones in continuous broadband noise Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 100 467-472
  • [10] Boswell A. E.(1959)Detection of a pulsed sinusoid in noise as a function of frequency Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 31 1446-1452