Neural fluctuation cues for simultaneous notched-noise masking and profile-analysis tasks: Insights from model midbrain responses.

2020 
Results of simultaneous notched-noise masking are commonly interpreted as reflecting the bandwidth of underlying auditory filters. This interpretation assumes that listeners detect a tone added to notched-noise based on an increase in energy at the output of an auditory filter. Previous work challenged this assumption by showing that randomly and independently varying (roving) the levels of each stimulus interval does not substantially worsen listener thresholds [Lentz, Richards, and Matiasek (1999). J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 106, 2779–2792]. Lentz et al. further challenged this assumption by showing that filter bandwidths based on notched-noise results were different from those based on a profile-analysis task [Green (1983). Am. Psychol. 38, 133–142; (1988). (Oxford University Press, New York)], although these estimates were later reconciled by emphasizing spectral peaks of the profile-analysis stimulus [Lentz (2006). J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 120, 945–956]. Here, a single physiological model is shown to account for...
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