AI Article Synopsis

  • Perceptual anchors are things we remember about sounds that help us recognize them later, and they come from our long-term memory.
  • In an experiment, ten amateur musicians listened to different tones to see how well they could tell the difference between them.
  • The study found that when the first tone stayed the same, the musicians did better at telling differences between tones because they used their memory more effectively, but had a harder time when the tones changed a lot.

Article Abstract

Perceptual anchors are representations of stimulus features stored in long-term memory rather than short-term memory. The present study investigated whether listeners use perceptual anchors to improve pure-tone frequency discrimination. Ten amateur musicians performed a two-interval, two-alternative forced-choice frequency-discrimination experiment. In one half of the experiment, the frequency of the first tone was fixed across trials, and in the other half, the frequency of the first tone was roved widely across trials. The durations of the interstimulus intervals (ISIs) and the frequency differences between the tones on each trial were also manipulated. The data were analyzed with a Bayesian model that assumed that performance was limited by sensory noise (related to the initial encoding of the stimuli), memory noise (which increased proportionally to the ISI), fluctuations in attention, and response bias. It was hypothesized that memory-noise variance increased more rapidly during roved-frequency discrimination than fixed-frequency discrimination because listeners used perceptual anchors in the latter condition. The results supported this hypothesis. The results also suggested that listeners experienced more lapses in attention during roved-frequency discrimination.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7043863PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/10.0000584DOI Listing

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