“…Informational masking (IM; Pollack, 1975) is defined as the compromised ability to perceive and analyze signals from a single source in a clutter of other sounds even if there is no interference of these signals’ excitation patterns in the inner ear (e.g., Durlach et al, 2003; Kidd, Mason, Richards, Gallun, & Durlach, 2008; Lutfi, Chang, Stamas, & Gilbertson, 2012; Watson, 2005). Presenting stimuli as a sequence of temporally separated sounds makes it possible to investigate IM, avoiding simultaneous masking effects (Dolležal et al, 2017; Eipert, Selle, & Klump, 2019; Tolnai et al, 2015; Watson, 2005; Winkler et al, 2003). IM is affected by the similarity between target and masker (similarity-based IM) and the variation of stimulus features from trial to trial (uncertainty-based IM), both modulating discrimination thresholds (e.g., Lutfi, 1993; Watson, 2005).…”