Demodulation Processes in Auditory Perception

Abstract

The long range goal of this project is the understanding of human auditory processing of information conveyed by complex, time-varying signals such as speech, music or important environmental sounds. Our work is guided by the assumption that human auditory communication is a 'modulation - demodulation' process. That is, we assume that sound sources produce a complex stream of sound pressure waves with information encoded as variations ( modulations) of the signal amplitude and frequency. The listeners task then is one of demodulation. Much of past. psychoacoustics work has been based in what we characterize as 'spectrum picture processing.' Complex sounds are Fourier analyzed to produce an amplitude-by-frequency 'picture' and the perception process is modeled as if the listener were analyzing the spectral picture. This approach leads to studies such as 'profile analysis' and the power-spectrum model of masking. Our approach leads us to investigate time-varying, complex sounds. We refer to them as dynamic signals and we have developed auditory signal processing models to help guide our experimental work.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Aug 01, 1994
Accession Number
ADA285427

Entities

People

  • Lawrence L. Feth

Organizations

  • Ohio State University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics
  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Amplitude
  • Amplitude Modulation
  • Auditory Perception
  • Auditory Signals
  • Bandwidth
  • Demodulation
  • Electrical Engineering
  • Frequency Domain
  • Frequency Modulation
  • Intensity
  • Modulation
  • Modulators
  • Perception
  • Power Spectra
  • Signal Processing
  • Sound Pressure
  • Spectra

Readers

  • Auditory Neuroscience/Auditory Physiology.
  • Radio communications and signal processing.
  • Wave Propagation and Nonlinear Chaotic Dynamics.