A probe-signal study of auditory discrimination of complex tones

1997 
The present experiments used an analogue of the probe-signal method of Greenberg and Larkin [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 44, 1513–1523 1968 to investigate the extent to which listeners direct attention to a particular spectral region when discriminating complex tones. The listeners’ task was to discriminate between two seven-component complex tones on the basis of an increment in the level of a single component. On two-thirds of trials the increment was achieved by adding a fixed primary signal to one component of the complex. The primary-signal trials were relatively easy and were intended to cue listeners to attend to the component to which the primary was added. On the remaining trials a smaller probe signal was added either to the cued component, or to one of three other components. The results of the first experiment, in which the complex tones had a flat spectrum, showed significantly better performance for probe signals applied to the cued component compared to the other three components. To control for th...
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