Spectral Cues in Human Sound Localization

Part of Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 12 (NIPS 1999)

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Authors

Craig Jin, Anna Corderoy, Simon Carlile, André van Schaik

Abstract

The differential contribution of the monaural and interaural spectral cues to human sound localization was examined using a combined psy(cid:173) chophysical and analytical approach. The cues to a sound's location were correlated on an individual basis with the human localization re(cid:173) sponses to a variety of spectrally manipulated sounds. The spectral cues derive from the acoustical filtering of an individual's auditory periphery which is characterized by the measured head-related transfer functions (HRTFs). Auditory localization performance was determined in virtual auditory space (VAS). Psychoacoustical experiments were conducted in which the amplitude spectra of the sound stimulus was varied indepen(cid:173) dentlyat each ear while preserving the normal timing cues, an impossibil(cid:173) ity in the free-field environment. Virtual auditory noise stimuli were gen(cid:173) erated over earphones for a specified target direction such that there was a "false" flat spectrum at the left eardrum. Using the subject's HRTFs, the sound spectrum at the right eardrum was then adjusted so that either the true right monaural spectral cue or the true interaural spectral cue was preserved. All subjects showed systematic mislocalizations in both the true right and true interaural spectral conditions which was absent in their control localization performance. The analysis of the different cues along with the subjects' localization responses suggests there are signif(cid:173) icant differences in the use of the monaural and interaural spectral cues and that the auditory system's reliance on the spectral cues varies with the sound condition.