1993
DOI: 10.1121/1.405812
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Adjustment and discrimination measurements of the precedence effect

Abstract: A simple model to summarize the precedence effect is proposed that uses a single metric to quantify the relative dominance of the initial interaural delay over the trailing interaural delay in lateralization. This model is described and then used to relate new measurements of the precedence effect made with adjustment and discrimination paradigms. In the adjustment task, subjects matched the lateral position of an acoustic pointer to the position of a composite test stimulus made up of initial and trailing bin… Show more

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Cited by 83 publications
(105 citation statements)
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“…The combined results from Shinn-Cunningham et al (1993) and Freyman et al (1991) suggest that all three measures of precedence outlined above reflect the operation of a single underlying mechanism. If this is the case, the degree to which the lead sound dominates in a localization task should be highly correlated with the degree to which information about the echo's position is suppressed and the degree to which the echo's identity as a separate event is suppressed.…”
Section: Aspects Of the Precedence Effect 1109mentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…The combined results from Shinn-Cunningham et al (1993) and Freyman et al (1991) suggest that all three measures of precedence outlined above reflect the operation of a single underlying mechanism. If this is the case, the degree to which the lead sound dominates in a localization task should be highly correlated with the degree to which information about the echo's position is suppressed and the degree to which the echo's identity as a separate event is suppressed.…”
Section: Aspects Of the Precedence Effect 1109mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…To date, there has been little systematic comparison of performance in the three tasks; two notable exceptions are the studies of Shinn-Cunningham et al (1993) and Freyman et al (1991). Shinn-Cunningham et al (1993) obtained adjustment (localization) and lag discrimination measures in the same subjects from precedence-effect stimuli (noise bursts) presented over headphones.…”
Section: Aspects Of the Precedence Effect 1109mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Many researchers discount the perceptual effects of echoes on source localization, citing a phenomenon known as the "precedence effect" (whereby the location of a leading sound dominates the perception of source location; e.g., see [35]). However, there is ample evidence that echoes can cause a measurable effect on perceived source location and on discriminability of the source position, particularly when the source has a slow rise time or when its onset is masked [36,37]. For applications in which information about the location of the source is more important than the realism of the display, including echoes and reverberation may be ill advised.…”
Section: Examples Of Factors To Considermentioning
confidence: 99%