AI Article Synopsis

  • Listeners typically perceive the position of sound sources accurately, but can confuse front and back locations due to ambiguities in interaural time differences (ITDs).
  • Wallach's hypothesis suggests that small head movements can help resolve this confusion by providing clearer directional information about the sound source.
  • Experiments showed that allowing head movements nearly eliminated front-back confusion, and even when movements were restricted, listeners could resolve ambiguities effectively by physically moving the sound source themselves.

Article Abstract

Normally, the apparent position of a sound source corresponds closely to its actual position. However, in some experimental situations listeners make large errors, such as indicating that a source in the frontal hemifield appears to be in the rear hemifield, or vice versa. These front-back confusions are thought to be a result of the inherent ambiguity of the primary interaural difference cues, interaural time difference (ITD) in particular. A given ITD could have been produced by a sound source anywhere on the so-called "cone of confusion." More than 50 years ago Wallach [J. Exp. Psychol. 27, 339-368 (1940)] argued that small head movements could provide the information necessary to resolve the ambiguity. The direction of the change in ITD that accompanies a head rotation is an unambiguous indicator of the proper hemifield. The experiments reported here are a modern test of Wallach's hypothesis. Listeners indicated the apparent positions of real and virtual sound sources in conditions in which head movements were either restricted or encouraged. The front-back confusions made in the restricted condition nearly disappeared in the condition in which head movements were encouraged. In a second experiment head movements were restricted, but the sound source was moved, either by the experimenter or by the listener. Only when the listener moved the sound source did front-back confusions disappear. The results clearly support Wallach's hypothesis and suggest further that head movements are not required to produce the dynamic cues needed to resolve front-back ambiguity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.426899DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

head movements
20
sound source
16
front-back confusions
12
front-back ambiguity
8
wallach's hypothesis
8
movements restricted
8
source
6
head
6
sound
5
movements
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!