Publications by authors named "Kyoko Kanafuka"

The gap transfer illusion is an auditory illusion in which a temporal gap in a long glide is perceived as if it had transferred to a physically continuous shorter glide. The illusion typically occurs when the long and the shorter glide cross each other at their temporal midpoints, where the long glide is physically divided by the gap. The occurrence of the gap transfer illusion was investigated in stimuli in which the duration and the slope of the long glide were 5000 ms and ∼0.

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When a long glide with a short temporal gap in its middle crosses with a continuous short glide at the temporal midpoint of both glides, the gap is perceived in the short glide instead of in the long glide. In the present article, we tested possible explanations for this "gap transfer illusion" by obtaining points of subjective equality of the pitches and durations of the two short tones that are subjectively divided by the gap. The results of two experiments showed that neither an explanation in terms ofenvelope patterns nor explanations in terms of combinationtones or acoustic beats could account for the perception of the short tones in the gap transfer illusion.

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