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[AUDITORY] AW: AUDITORY Digest - 31 Jan 2018 to 1 Feb 2018 (#2018-25)



Dear Dylan,

ILD suppression was studied by a number of people and is also covered in Ruth's review of the precedence effect (-> discrimination suppression). Here are a few selected studies that come to my mind in no particular order:
- Houtgast, T., and Aoki, S. (1994). "Stimulus-onset dominance in the perception of binaural information," Hear Res 72, 29-36.
- Gaskell, H. (1983). "The precedence effect," Hear Res 12, 277-303.
- Dizon, R. M., and Colburn, H. S. (2006). "The influence of spectral, temporal, and interaural stimulus variations on the precedence effect," J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 119, 2947-2964.
- Zurek, P. M. (1980). "The precedence effect and its possible role in the avoidance of interaural ambiguities," J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 67, 952-964.
- see also Braasch, J., and Blauert, J. (2003). "The precedence effect for noise bursts of different bandwidths. II. Comparison of model algorithms," Acoust. Sci. & Techn. 24, 293-303.
- see also binaural adaptation work by Hafter and colleagues, e.g. Hafter+Wenzel 1983

Best wishes,

Bernhard

--
DAGA Conference Munich, 19.-22. March 2018
http://2018.daga-tagung.de/ 

Prof. Dr.-Ing. Bernhard U. Seeber
Professor of Audio Information Processing

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Technical University of Munich
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> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: AUDITORY - Research in Auditory Perception
> [mailto:AUDITORY@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Im Auftrag von AUDITORY automatic
> digest system
> Gesendet: Freitag, 2. Februar 2018 06:00
> An: AUDITORY@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Betreff: AUDITORY Digest - 31 Jan 2018 to 1 Feb 2018 (#2018-25)
> 
Dear list

Does anyone know of previous experimental studies that show to what extent ILD near-field range cues are immune to subsequent reflections, under normal listening conditions, ie like the ITD precedence effect.

Thanks
-- 
Dr Dylan Menzies
Senior Research Fellow
Institute of Sound and Vibration Research
University of Southampton, UK
www.soton.ac.uk/vaae