Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect

abstract: Sound localization can be difficult in a reverberant environment. Fortunately listeners can utilize various perceptual compensatory mechanisms to increase the reliability of sound localization when provided with ambiguous physical evidence. For example, the directional information of echoe...

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Other Authors: Montagne, Christopher Marc (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34880
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-348802018-06-22T03:06:33Z Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect abstract: Sound localization can be difficult in a reverberant environment. Fortunately listeners can utilize various perceptual compensatory mechanisms to increase the reliability of sound localization when provided with ambiguous physical evidence. For example, the directional information of echoes can be perceptually suppressed by the direct sound to achieve a single, fused auditory event in a process called the precedence effect (Litovsky et al., 1999). Visual cues also influence sound localization through a phenomenon known as the ventriloquist effect. It is classically demonstrated by a puppeteer who speaks without visible lip movements while moving the mouth of a puppet synchronously with his/her speech (Gelder and Bertelson, 2003). If the ventriloquist is successful, sound will be “captured” by vision and be perceived to be originating at the location of the puppet. This thesis investigates the influence of vision on the spatial localization of audio-visual stimuli. Participants seated in a sound-attenuated room indicated their perceived locations of either ISI or level-difference stimuli in free field conditions. Two types of stereophonic phantom sound sources, created by modulating the inter-stimulus time interval (ISI) or level difference between two loudspeakers, were used as auditory stimuli. The results showed that the light cues influenced auditory spatial perception to a greater extent for the ISI stimuli than the level difference stimuli. A binaural signal analysis further revealed that the greater visual bias for the ISI phantom sound sources was correlated with the increasingly ambiguous binaural cues of the ISI signals. This finding suggests that when sound localization cues are unreliable, perceptual decisions become increasingly biased towards vision for finding a sound source. These results support the cue saliency theory underlying cross-modal bias and extend this theory to include stereophonic phantom sound sources. Dissertation/Thesis Montagne, Christopher Marc (Author) Zhou, Yi (Advisor) Buneo, Christopher A (Advisor) Yost, William A (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Acoustics Neurosciences Audio-Visual Integration Bayesian Multisensory Integration Sound Localization Summing Localization Ventriloquist Effect eng 33 pages Masters Thesis Bioengineering 2015 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34880 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Acoustics
Neurosciences
Audio-Visual Integration
Bayesian
Multisensory Integration
Sound Localization
Summing Localization
Ventriloquist Effect
spellingShingle Acoustics
Neurosciences
Audio-Visual Integration
Bayesian
Multisensory Integration
Sound Localization
Summing Localization
Ventriloquist Effect
Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect
description abstract: Sound localization can be difficult in a reverberant environment. Fortunately listeners can utilize various perceptual compensatory mechanisms to increase the reliability of sound localization when provided with ambiguous physical evidence. For example, the directional information of echoes can be perceptually suppressed by the direct sound to achieve a single, fused auditory event in a process called the precedence effect (Litovsky et al., 1999). Visual cues also influence sound localization through a phenomenon known as the ventriloquist effect. It is classically demonstrated by a puppeteer who speaks without visible lip movements while moving the mouth of a puppet synchronously with his/her speech (Gelder and Bertelson, 2003). If the ventriloquist is successful, sound will be “captured” by vision and be perceived to be originating at the location of the puppet. This thesis investigates the influence of vision on the spatial localization of audio-visual stimuli. Participants seated in a sound-attenuated room indicated their perceived locations of either ISI or level-difference stimuli in free field conditions. Two types of stereophonic phantom sound sources, created by modulating the inter-stimulus time interval (ISI) or level difference between two loudspeakers, were used as auditory stimuli. The results showed that the light cues influenced auditory spatial perception to a greater extent for the ISI stimuli than the level difference stimuli. A binaural signal analysis further revealed that the greater visual bias for the ISI phantom sound sources was correlated with the increasingly ambiguous binaural cues of the ISI signals. This finding suggests that when sound localization cues are unreliable, perceptual decisions become increasingly biased towards vision for finding a sound source. These results support the cue saliency theory underlying cross-modal bias and extend this theory to include stereophonic phantom sound sources. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Bioengineering 2015
author2 Montagne, Christopher Marc (Author)
author_facet Montagne, Christopher Marc (Author)
title Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect
title_short Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect
title_full Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect
title_fullStr Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect
title_full_unstemmed Investigating Compensatory Mechanisms for Sound Localization: Visual Cue Integration and the Precedence Effect
title_sort investigating compensatory mechanisms for sound localization: visual cue integration and the precedence effect
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34880
_version_ 1718700879790473216