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Results 451 - 500 of 1361
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Genuit Klaus - - 2007
The environmental noise of several cities located all over the world was recorded, compared, and analyzed. The analyses were focused on the determination of distinctive features and significant patterns of the respective soundscapes, which led to the unique sound of the urban places and that are important because of their ...
Kovacic Peter - - 2008
Ototoxins are substances of various structures and classes. This review provides extensive evidence for involvement of electron transfer (ET), reactive oxygen species (ROS) and oxidative stress (OS) as a unifying theme. Successful application is made to the large majority of ototoxins, as well as noise trauma. We believe it is ...
Onuu, M U; ;
A wide-range of acoustical measurements have been conducted in the open field, guinea grass (<i>panicum maximum</i>) and forest which comprises iroko (<i>milicia ezcelea</i>) and white afara (<i>terminalia superba</i>) trees in the ratio of 2:1 approximately. Excess noise attenuation spectra have been plotted for the grass and forest for various distances. ...
Makarewicz Rufin - - 2007
The effects of vehicle speed variation on road traffic noise are analyzed. The steady speed motion is replaced by deceleration, cruise, and acceleration. Because of a relatively loud acceleration noise, such a speed variation results not only in the noise decrease zones, but in the noise increase zones as well. ...
Whitmal Nathaniel A - - 2007
Channel vocoders using either tone or band-limited noise carriers have been used in experiments to simulate cochlear implant processing in normal-hearing listeners. Previous results from these experiments have suggested that the two vocoder types produce speech of nearly equal intelligibility in quiet conditions. The purpose of this study was to ...
Nijland Hans A - - 2007
People move to another house for different reasons. It is sometimes presumed that a process of self-selection might take place on the basis of noise sensitivity, i.e., sensitive people would either leave high noise areas or not move into these areas in the first place. Thus, a "survivor population" would ...
Sheen Shaw-Ching - - 2007
This work investigates the efficacy of multiple-jet nozzles in reducing exposure to noise radiated from high-speed jet flows that are frequently used for cleaning and other purposes. A single-jet nozzle is replaced by one with multiple and smaller outlets with the same combined exit area. Noise generated by multiple-jet nozzles ...
Funke Klaus - - 2007
Adding noise to a weak signal can paradoxically improve signal detection, a process called 'stochastic resonance' (SR). In the visual system, noise might be introduced by the image jitter resulting from high-frequency eye movements, like eye microtremor and microsaccades. To test whether this kind of noise might be beneficial or ...
Kuznetsov Alexander M - - 2007
Theoretical description of various properties of redox-mediated tunnel contacts is presented. The dependences of the current on the overpotential and bias voltage under the sweeping voltammetry conditions are addressed. The effect of switching between two redox states on the shape of current/voltage characteristics is discussed. The shot noise and telegraph ...
Levi Dennis M - - 2007
Visual perception is limited by both the strength of the neural signals, and by the noise in the visual nervous system. Here we use one-dimensional white noise as input, to study the response of amblyopic visual system. We measured the thresholds for detection and discrimination of noise contrast. Using an ...
Bhattacharya Aparajita - - 2007
Nonlinear sensory and neural processing mechanisms have been exploited to enhance spectral contrast for improvement of speech understanding in noise. The "companding" algorithm employs both two-tone suppression and adaptive gain mechanisms to achieve spectral enhancement. This study implemented a 50-channel companding strategy and evaluated its efficiency as a front-end noise ...
Perez Claudio A - - 2007
Stochastic resonance (SR) is the counterintuitive phenomenon in which noise enhances detection of sub-threshold stimuli. The SR psychophysical threshold theory establishes that the required amplitude to exceed the sensory threshold barrier can be reached by adding noise to a sub-threshold stimulus. The aim of this study was to test the ...
Peters Richard A - - 2007
Animal signals are optimized for particular signaling environments [1-3]. While signaling, senders often choose favorable conditions that ensure reliable detection and transmission [4-8], suggesting that they are sensitive to changes in signal efficacy. Recent evidence has also shown that animals will increase the amplitude or intensity of their acoustic signals ...
Poggio M - - 2007
We cool the fundamental mechanical mode of an ultrasoft silicon cantilever from a base temperature of 2.2 K down to 2.9+/-0.3 mK using active optomechanical feedback. The lowest observed mode temperature is consistent with limits determined by the properties of the cantilever and by the measurement noise. For high feedback ...
Kozmann György - - 2007
OBJECTIVE: According to previous studies, the complex substrate of malignant arrhythmias needs a detailed spatio-temporal noninvasive characterization of low-amplitude dynamic changes in beat-to-beat cardiac repolarization. METHODS: Body surface potential map (BSPM) records were taken on 14 healthy male and female subjects (age 20-80 years) and on 6 ventricular arrhythmia patients, ...
Janusek Dariusz - - 2007
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate influence of noise, T-wave jitter and electrocardiographic (ECG) signal parameters on sensitivity of T-wave alternans (TWA) detection methods. METHODS: Methods of the TWA detection were tested: correlation (CM), spectral (FFTM), spectral with coherent averaging (CFFTM), complex demodulation (CDM), Karhunen-Loeve transform (KLT) ...
Slagley Jeremy M - - 2007
Active noise control (ANC) works best to reduce low frequency noise. Because many industrial noise sources are broadband, ANC may be used more if it can be successfully applied to higher frequency ranges. This study explored one method to increase ANC effectiveness at higher frequencies. ANC is particularly useful in ...
Anderson Kevin E H - - 2007
We analyze sources of noise in kilohertz frequency pump/probe experiments and present a method for reducing experimental noise by identifying and filtering noisy shots. The power spectrum of instrumental noise shows high frequency, small amplitude modulations which cannot be averaged out. A histogram analysis shows that low frequency, large amplitude ...
Won Jong Ho - - 2007
Speech perception ability in noise is one of the most practical measures of success with a cochlear implant; however, with experience, this ability can change dramatically over time, making it a less than ideal tool for comparing performance among different processing strategies. This study examined performance on a spectral discrimination ...
Penna, Mario
Animals using sound communication have developed different strategies to overcome noise interference, but studies have rarely examined animals behaving in their natural environments. Males of the leptodactylid frog Eupsophus calcaratus exposed to natural noises of wind, rain, creek and sea surf and to a band-pass noise encompassing the main spectral ...
Falkenberg Helle K - - 2007
PURPOSE: Primary open angle glaucoma (POAG) is a leading cause of irreversible adult blindness and is characterized by progressive optic neuropathy and constriction of the visual field. Behavioral tests for POAG target retinal ganglion cell (RGC) classes that have reduced redundancy or that might be selectively damaged, but these tests ...
Jiang Dan - - 2007
BACKGROUND: Inadvertent drilling on the ossicular chain is one of the causes of sensorineural hearing loss (HL) that may follow tympanomastoid surgery. A high-frequency HL is most frequently observed. It is speculated that the HL is a result of vibration of the ossicular chain resembling acoustic noise trauma. It is ...
Vasconcelos Raquel O - - 2007
Underwater noise pollution is an increasing environmental problem which might affect communication, behaviour, fitness and consequently species' survival. The most common anthropogenic noises in aquatic habitats derive from shipping. In the present study we investigated the implications of noise pollution from a ship on the sound detectability, namely of conspecific ...
Hodgetts William E - - 2007
OBJECTIVES: The main objective of this study was to determine the influence of listening environment and earphone style on the preferred-listening levels (PLLs) measured in users' ear canals with a commercially-available MP3 player. It was hypothesized that listeners would prefer higher levels with earbud headphones as opposed to over-the-ear headphones, ...
Wysocki Lidia Eva - - 2007
The detectability of acoustic signals depends on the hearing abilities of receivers and the prevailing ambient noise in a given habitat. Ambient noise is inherent in all terrestrial and aquatic habitats and has the potential to severely mask relevant acoustic signals. In order to assess the detectability of sounds to ...
Ord Terry J - - 2007
Extensive research over the last few decades has revealed that many acoustically communicating animals compensate for the masking effect of background noise by changing the structure of their signals. Familiar examples include birds using acoustic properties that enhance the transmission of vocalizations in noisy habitats. Here, we show that the ...
Bloemhof E E - - 2007
Great interest has been focused on the problem of detecting faint companions, possibly including extrasolar planets, very close to other stars. A promising approach involves coupling high-correction adaptive optics to coronagraphs, for which many new and innovative designs have emerged. Detection of faint companions will require suppression of noise due ...
Chacron Maurice J - - 2007
Neurons in vivo must process sensory information in the presence of significant noise. It is thus plausible to assume that neural systems have developed mechanisms to reduce this noise. Theoretical studies have shown that threshold fatigue (i.e. cumulative increases in the threshold during repetitive firing) could lead to noise reduction ...
Mihaylov Petar - - 2007
Research has shown that exposure to a homogeneous gray patch surrounded by a dynamic noise background causes filling-in of the artificial scotoma by the twinkling noise from the surround. When the background is switched off, observers report perception of a prolonged patch of twinkling noise in the unstimulated area. We ...
Jiang Yi - - 2007
Familiar and recognizable stimuli enjoy an advantage of predominance during binocular rivalry, and this advantage is usually attributed to their enhanced processing during the dominant phase. However, do familiar and recognizable stimuli have an advantage in breaking suppression? Test images were gradually introduced to one eye to compete against a ...
Kobayashi Maori - - 2007
The effect of a visual stimulus on the auditory continuity illusion was examined. Observers judged whether a tone that was repeatedly alternated with a band-pass noise was continuous or discontinuous. In most observers, a transient visual stimulus that was synchronized with the onset of the noise increased the limit of ...
Nakashima Ann - - 2007
An experiment was performed to study auditory perception and cognitive function in the presence of low-frequency dominant armoured vehicle noise (LAV III). Thirty-six normal hearing subjects were assigned to one of three noise backgrounds: Quiet, pink noise and vehicle noise. The pink and vehicle noise were presented at 80 dBA. ...
Allard Rémy - - 2007
To study the difference of sensitivity to luminance- (LM) and contrast-modulated (CM) stimuli, we compared LM and CM detection thresholds in LM- and CM-noise conditions. The results showed a double dissociation (no or little inter-attribute interaction) between the processing of these stimuli, which implies that both stimuli must be processed, ...
Wang Neng-Ping - - 2007
In field-effect transistors (FETs), charge trapping in the gate oxide is known to cause low-frequency noise and threshold shifts. Here we calculate the effect of single trapped charges in a carbon nanotube FET, using the nonequilibrium Greens function method in a tight-binding approximation. We find that a single charge can ...
Smits Cas - - 2007
The objective of the study was to examine the ability to understand digits in different types of noise. Adaptive speech-in-noise tests were developed that measure the speech-reception-threshold (SRTn) i.e. signal-to-noise ratio that corresponds to 50% intelligibility. Digits were presented in continuous noise, 16-Hz interrupted noise, and 32-Hz interrupted noise. Also ...
Park Kwangho - - 2007
We report a general phenomenon concerning the effect of noise on phase synchronization in coupled chaotic oscillators: the average phase-synchronization time exhibits a nonmonotonic behavior with the noise amplitude. In particular, we find that the time exhibits a local minimum for relatively small noise amplitude but a local maximum for ...
Abta Refael - - 2007
The enigmatic stability of population oscillations within ecological systems is analyzed. The underlying mechanism is presented in the framework of two interacting species free to migrate between two spatial patches. It is shown that the combined effects of migration and noise cannot account for the stabilization. The missing ingredient is ...
Wertheim A H - - 2007
When a slowly moving pattern is presented on a monitor which itself is moved, the pattern appears to freeze on the screen (Mesland and Wertheim in Vis Res 36(20):3325-3328, 1996) even if we move our head with the monitor, as with a head mounted display (Pavard and Berthoz in Perception ...
Pratt Hillel - - 2007
OBJECTIVE: To study the effects of duration and intensity of noise that precedes gaps in noise on the N-Complex (N(1a) and N(1b)) of Event-Related Potentials (ERPs) to the gaps. METHODS: ERPs were recorded from 13 normal subjects in response to 20 ms gaps in 2-4.5 s segments of binaural white ...
Muzet Alain - - 2007
Unlike other physical ambient factors (i.e. electromagnetic fields or air pollutants), noise is perceived by a specific system (auditory system) in humans. It is therefore a phenomenon that is sensed and evaluated by everybody, and this is why exposure to noise is one of the most, if not the most, ...
Wehr R - - 2007
An infrared laser spectrometer based on difference-frequency generation in LiIO(3) is described. The spectrometer has a frequency uncertainty of less than 1 MHz and a signal-to-noise ratio between 3000:1 and 10,000:1. These properties allow the spectrometer to be used for studies of the non-Lorentzian and non-Voigt character of absorption line ...
Almog R - - 2007
We study mechanical amplification and noise squeezing in a nonlinear nanomechanical resonator driven by an intense pump near its dynamical bifurcation point, namely, the onset of Duffing bistability. Phase sensitive amplification is achieved by a homodyne detection scheme, where the displacement detector's output, which has a correlated spectrum around the ...
Ries Dennis T - - 2007
The present study examined the extent to which noise type and fine differentiations in noise level produced improvements in auditory threshold via the mechanism of stochastic resonance. Participants' thresholds for a sinusoidal signal (2.0 kHz) were estimated using a three interval forced choice task. These measures were obtained in quiet, ...
Spriet Ann - - 2007
OBJECTIVE: This paper evaluates the benefit of the two-microphone adaptive beamformer BEAM in the Nucleus Freedom cochlear implant (CI) system for speech understanding in background noise by CI users. DESIGN: A double-blind evaluation of the two-microphone adaptive beamformer BEAM and a hardware directional microphone was carried out with five adult ...
Nikitin A - - 2007
We have investigated information transmission in an array of threshold units that have signal-dependent noise and a common input signal. We demonstrate a phenomenon similar to stochastic resonance and suprathreshold stochastic resonance with additive noise and show that information transmission can be enhanced by a nonzero level of noise. By ...
Egnor S E Roian - - 2007
Organisms that use vocal signals to communicate often modulate their vocalizations to avoid being masked by other sounds in the environment. Although some environmental noise is continuous, both biotic and abiotic noise can be intermittent, or even periodic. Interference from intermittent noise can be avoided if calls are timed to ...
Klein Markus - - 2007
High-resolution long-time force measurements by optical tweezers are often limited by low-frequency (1/f) noise. A dual-trap technique is presented that can reduce such noise in the force signal. It incorporates a second trap (a reference trap) that probes the noise in the system and it is based upon the assumption ...
Manjarrez Elias - - 2007
Harper [D.W. Harper, Signal detection analysis of effect of white noise intensity on sensitivity to visual flicker, Percept. Mot. Skills 48 (1979) 791-798] demonstrated that the visual flicker sensitivity was an inverted U-like function of the intensity of different levels of auditory noise from 50 to 90dB (SPL), without concomitant ...
Cheng Sen - - 2007
The sensorimotor calibration of visually guided reaching changes on a trial-to-trial basis in response to random shifts in the visual feedback of the hand. We show that a simple linear dynamical system is sufficient to model the dynamics of this adaptive process. In this model, an internal variable represents the ...
Kingdon Jonathan - - 2007
Most animals and plants need to send signals and rely on some sort of response. For an active receptor of signals, virtually all the signal transmissions that litter the environment, bar those that are functional at any given moment, can be described as 'noise'. I concentrate here on some primate ...
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