Publication date: Available online 22 January 2016
Source:Hearing Research
Author(s): Ningyuan Wang, Andrew J. Oxenham
Auditory enhancement refers to the observation that the salience of one spectral region (the “signal”) of a broadband sound can be enhanced and can “pop out” from the remainder of the sound (the “masker”) if it is preceded by the broadband sound without the signal. The present study investigated auditory enhancement as an effective change in loudness, to determine whether it reflects a change in the loudness of the signal, the masker, or both. In the first experiment, the 500-ms precursor, an inharmonic complex with logarithmically spaced components, was followed after a 50-ms gap by the 100-ms signal or masker alone, the loudness of which was compared with that of the same signal or masker presented 2 s later. In the second experiment, the loudness of the signal embedded in the masker was assessed with and without a precursor using the same method, as was the loudness of the entire signal-plus-masker complex. The results suggest that the precursor does not affect the loudness of the signal or the masker alone, but enhances the loudness of the signal in the presence of the masker, while leaving the loudness of the surrounding masker unaffected. The results are consistent with an explanation based on “adaptation of inhibition” [Viemeister and Bacon (1982). J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 71, 1502-1507].
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