Subject: limits of discrimination of tone vs band-pass noise From: =?ISO-8859-2?Q?Pawe=B3_Ku=B6mierek?= <pawel.kusmierek@xxxxxxxx> Date: Sat, 4 Jun 2011 01:12:33 -0400 List-Archive:<http://lists.mcgill.ca/scripts/wa.exe?LIST=AUDITORY>--bcaec520ea3fb806c004a4dbecc8 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Dear list, I am trying to figure out if anyone has measured factors influencing tone vs band-pass noise discrimination - in humans, or in any other mammals. I guess that such discrimination could fail for very narrow bands of noise, for very short signals, and/or at very low intensity, but are there any published studies showing this? Any pointers and suggestions would very welcome. Thank you, Pawel Kusmierek --bcaec520ea3fb806c004a4dbecc8 Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable <div>Dear list,</div><div>=A0</div><div>I am trying to figure out if anyone= has measured factors influencing=A0tone vs band-pass noise discrimination = - in humans, or in any other mammals. I guess that such discrimination coul= d fail for very narrow bands of noise, for very short signals, and/or at ve= ry low intensity, but are there any published studies showing this? Any poi= nters and suggestions would very welcome.</div> <div>=A0</div><div>Thank you,</div><div>=A0</div><div>Pawel Kusmierek</div> --bcaec520ea3fb806c004a4dbecc8--