COMODULATION MASKING RELEASE IN A SONGBIRD

被引:59
作者
KLUMP, GM
LANGEMANN, U
机构
[1] Institut für Zoologie, Technische Universität München, 85748 Garching
关键词
MASKING; MASKING RELEASE; COMODULATION; COMODULATION MASKING RELEASE; BIRD;
D O I
10.1016/0378-5955(95)00087-K
中图分类号
R36 [病理学]; R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100104 ; 100213 ;
摘要
Comodulation masking release (CMR) describes the reduced masking of a pure tone when the masking is a noise that is coherently amplitude modulated (comodulated) over the total range of the spectrum compared to masking by an unmodulated noise of the same bandwidth and overall energy. The masking release results from cues available within a critical band and from cues generated by comparisons across critical bands ('true' CMR). Here we report data on masking release and 'true' CMR in a songbird, the European starling (Sturnus vulgaris), that was demonstrated in a psychoacoustic experiment using a GO/NOGO paradigm. Masked thresholds for 2-kHz tones centered in digitally generated continuous masking noise of different bandwidths were determined, and the amount of masking release was calculated as the threshold difference between the unmodulated and the comodulated condition. In the first experiment the modulator was a 50-Hz lowpass noise. A masking release of 11.8 dB was found for the noise masker with the largest bandwidth (1600 Hz). With the masker bandwidth decreasing to 50 Hz, the birds' release from masking was reduced to 1.6 dB. The starling's 'true' CMR was 4 dB or 8 dB, depending on the definition that was applied. In a second experiment the masker bandwidth was constant (1600 Hz) and the cut-off frequency of the modulator was varied. A release from masking of 17.8 dB was found for a modulator cut-off frequency of 12.5 Hz. It decreased to 6.1 dB with an increase in the modulator cut-off frequency to 400 Hz. The duration of the test signal (100-750 ms) had little effect on the release from masking. Given the similarities in the release from masking and in CMR of starlings and humans, the starling may provide an excellent model for studying the mechanisms that underlie the generation of CMR.
引用
收藏
页码:157 / 164
页数:8
相关论文
共 36 条
[22]  
MOORE B C J, 1990, British Journal of Audiology, V24, P131, DOI 10.3109/03005369009077854
[23]  
Moore B. C. J., 1992, Journal of the Acoustical Society of Japan (E), V13, P25, DOI 10.1250/ast.13.25
[24]   COMODULATION MASKING RELEASE AS A FUNCTION OF BANDWIDTH AND TIME-DELAY BETWEEN ON-FREQUENCY AND FLANKING-BAND MASKERS [J].
MOORE, BCJ ;
SCHOONEVELDT, GP .
JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1990, 88 (02) :725-731
[25]   COMODULATION MASKING RELEASE IN SUBJECTS WITH UNILATERAL AND BILATERAL HEARING IMPAIRMENT [J].
MOORE, BCJ ;
SHAILER, MJ ;
HALL, JW ;
SCHOONEVELDT, GP .
JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1993, 93 (01) :435-451
[26]   NEURAL CORRELATES OF PSYCHOPHYSICAL RELEASE FROM MASKING [J].
MOTT, JB ;
MCDONALD, LP ;
SINEX, DG .
JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1990, 88 (06) :2682-2691
[27]   COMODULATION MASKING RELEASE FOR ELDERLY LISTENERS WITH RELATIVELY NORMAL AUDIOGRAMS [J].
PETERS, RW ;
HALL, JW .
JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1994, 96 (05) :2674-2682
[28]   REVERBERATIONS AND AMPLITUDE FLUCTUATIONS IN THE PROPAGATION OF SOUND IN A FOREST - IMPLICATIONS FOR ANIMAL COMMUNICATION [J].
RICHARDS, DG ;
WILEY, RH .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1980, 115 (03) :381-399
[29]  
SCHARF B, 1970, FDN MODERN AUDITORY, P159