Abstract
Hearing distortion to “hear the world”
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol.157(4_Supplement), pp.A276-A276
04/01/2025
DOI: 10.1121/10.0038049
Abstract
Separating sounds into distinct causal components (i.e., auditory scene analysis, as exemplified by the “cocktail party problem”) is fundamental to hearing. We investigated how human comprehension of a single voice in a mixture is affected by various distortions (e.g., reverberation, filters, power compression, etc.), which are common in real-world scenes, in telecommunications technology, and induced by hearing aids. We demonstrate that distorting the mixture of voices reduces comprehension (as expected), but that distorting the target voice only (by comparable amounts) can aid comprehension. This shows distortion can sometimes aid listeners, presumably by making the voices more separable. In another experiment, we assess the human ability to recognize distortion itself, by asking listeners to match equivalent degrees of distortion across recordings of different voices. We show humans can robustly recognize both speaker identity and degree of distortion when both vary unpredictably. As distorted sounds are structured by both the source and the particular structure of the distortion, to successfully recognize the source and/or the transmission channel the auditory system must separately infer the two causal factors. Thus we propose that hearing a single distorted sound may itself be an auditory scene analysis problem, and can be studied as such.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Hearing distortion to “hear the world”
- Creators
- Jeff J. StolleyJames Traer
- Resource Type
- Abstract
- Publication Details
- The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, Vol.157(4_Supplement), pp.A276-A276
- DOI
- 10.1121/10.0038049
- ISSN
- 1520-8524
- eISSN
- 1520-8524
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 04/01/2025
- Academic Unit
- Psychological and Brain Sciences; Iowa Neuroscience Institute
- Record Identifier
- 9984865313002771
Metrics
1 Record Views