Preface |
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xi | |
Introduction: Auditory processing of complex sounds |
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1 | (5) |
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SECTION I SPECTRAL PATTERN PROCESSING: Interaction among Critical Bands, Profile Analysis, and Co-Modulation Masking Release |
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1 The detection of spectral shape change |
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6 | (10) |
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2 Auditory discrimination of complex sounds: The effects of amplitude perturbation on spectral shape discrimination |
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16 | (10) |
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3 Spectral and temporal comparisons in auditory masking |
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26 | (11) |
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4 Simultaneous masking by small numbers of sinusoids under conditions of uncertainty |
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37 | (10) |
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5 Discrimination of frequency ratios |
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47 | (10) |
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6 Experiments on Comodulation Masking Release |
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57 | (10) |
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7 Central and peripheral factors aiding signal detection with complex stimuli |
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67 | (9) |
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8 Demodulation processes in auditory perception |
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76 | (11) |
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SECTION II TEMPORAL PATTERN PROCESSING: Rhythm, Spectral Synchrony, Amplitude-Modulation, and Binaural Precedence |
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9 The perception of repetitive auditory temporal patterns |
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87 | (17) |
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10 Computational models of tonal sequence discrimination |
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104 | (14) |
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11 On the significance of spectral synchrony for signal detection |
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118 | (8) |
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12 Temporal fluctuations and the discrimination of spectrally dense signals by human listeners |
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126 | (10) |
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13 Perception of the temporal envelope of amplitude-modulated noise by hearing-impaired listeners |
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136 | (11) |
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14 On creating a precedent for binaural patterns: When is an echo an echo? |
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147 | (10) |
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SECTION III PITCH OF COMPLEX SOUNDS: Virtual Pitch, Central Spectrum, Theories, and Animal Models |
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15 Gestalt principles and music perception |
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157 | (10) |
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16 A Pulse Ribbon Model of peripheral auditory processing |
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167 | (13) |
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17 The perception of inharmonic complex tones |
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180 | (10) |
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18 Complex spectral patterns with interaural differences: Dichotic pitch and the `Central Spectrum' |
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190 | (12) |
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19 Comparative aspects of complex acoustic perception |
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202 | (10) |
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SECTION IV AUDITORY PERIPHERAL PHYSIOLOGY: Rate and Synchrony Codes |
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20 Rate coding in the auditory-nerve |
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212 | (13) |
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21 Periodicity coding in cochlear nerve and ventral cochlear nucleus |
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225 | (12) |
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22 Coding of complex tones in temporal response patterns of auditory nerve fibers |
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237 | (10) |
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SECTION V SPEECH PERCEPTION: Speech versus Non-Speech Perception and a New Model |
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23 Auditory perception of complex sounds: Some comparisons of speech vs. non-speech signals |
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247 | (10) |
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24 Auditory-Perceptual processing of speech waveforms |
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257 | (10) |
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SECTION VI PERCEPTUAL ORGANIZATION OF COMPLEX SOUNDS: Informational Masking, Stimulus Uncertainty, Learning, Attention, Memory, and Stream Segregation |
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25 Uncertainty, informational masking, and the capacity of immediate auditory memory |
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267 | (11) |
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26 Directed attention in complex sound perception |
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278 | (11) |
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27 Auditory memory: Procedures to examine two phases |
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289 | (10) |
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28 Concurrent pitch segregation |
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299 | (16) |
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Subject Index |
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315 | (8) |
Author Index |
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323 | |