JOURNAL ARTICLE

Masking of Tone Bursts by Modulated Noise in Normal, Noise-Masked Normal, and Hearing-Impaired Listeners

Larry E. Humes

Year: 1990 Journal:   Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research Vol: 33 (1)Pages: 3-8   Publisher: American Speech–Language–Hearing Association

Abstract

Threshold of 4.6-ms tone bursts was measured in quiet and in the presence of a 100% sinusoidally amplitude-modulated speech-shaped noise. For the modulated-noise conditions, the onset of the tone burst coincided either with the maximum or the minimum modulator amplitude. The difference in these two masked thresholds provided an indication of the psychoacoustic modulation depth, or the modulation depth preserved within the auditory system. Modulation frequencies spanning the modulation spectrum of speech (2.5 to 20 Hz) were examined. Tone bursts were 500, 1400, and 4000 Hz. Subjects included normal listeners, normal listeners with a hearing loss simulated by high-pass noise, and hearing-impaired listeners having high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss. Normal listeners revealed a psychoacoustic modulation depth of 30–40 dB for the lowest modulation frequencies which decreased to about 15 dB at 20 Hz. The psychoacoustic modulation depth was decreased in the normal listeners with simulated hearing loss and in the hearing-impaired listeners. There was general agreement in the data, however, for the latter two groups of listeners suggesting that the normal listeners with hearing loss simulated by an additional masking noise provided a good representation of the performance of hearing-impaired listeners on this task.

Keywords:
Psychoacoustics Audiology Masking (illustration) QUIET Tone (literature) Noise (video) Modulation (music) Acoustics Hearing loss Amplitude modulation Frequency modulation Psychology Perception Physics Medicine Computer science Telecommunications Radio frequency

Metrics

15
Cited By
0.69
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
16
Refs
0.69
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Topics

Hearing Loss and Rehabilitation
Life Sciences →  Neuroscience →  Cognitive Neuroscience
Speech and Audio Processing
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Signal Processing
Noise Effects and Management
Health Sciences →  Health Professions →  Speech and Hearing

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