Search Results
Results 251 - 300 of 535
< 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 >
Bacon Sid R - - 2002
Spectral integration was measured for pure-tone signals masked by unmodulated or modulated noise bands centered at the signal frequencies. The bands were typically 100 Hz wide, and when modulated, they were sinusoidally amplitude modulated at a rate of 8 Hz and a depth of 100%. In experiment 1, thresholds were ...
Demontis Gian Carlo - - 2002
The visual system is equipped with highly sensitive but slow detectors, yet it can resolve light changes up to 60 Hz. Processes taking place in retinal circuits go beyond the intrinsic limits of the transduction machinery by an unconventional exploitation of voltage-dependent conductances, cleverly lined up to generate a cascade ...
Chakraborti S R - - 2002
Fast (up to 30 degrees /s) anticipatory smooth pursuit eye movements can be built up with repeated transient motion stimuli. It is thought that such stimuli charge a putative internal store of velocity information that can then drive anticipatory movements in the absence of a target. The aim of this ...
Callens F - - 2002
Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) applications like e.g. EPR dosimetry and dating, are usually performed at X-band frequencies because of practical reasons (cost, sample size, etc.). However, it is increasingly recognized that the radiation-induced EPR signals are strongly composite, what might affect dose/age estimates. A few recent examples from both the ...
Studebaker Gerald A - - 2002
A study was carried out to determine the relative importance to speech intelligibility of different intensities within the speech dynamic range. The functions that were derived are analogous to previous descriptions of the relative importance of different frequencies and are referred to here as intensity-importance functions (IIFs). They were obtained ...
Kaiser Jochen - - 2002
Increasing evidence suggests separate auditory pattern and space processing streams. The present paper describes two magnetoencephalogram studies examining gamma-band activity to changes in auditory patterns using consonant-vowel syllables (experiment 1), animal vocalizations and artificial noises (experiment 2). Two samples of each sound type were presented to passively listening subjects in ...
Efimov Yu Ya - - 2002
The problem is investigated whether the distributions of bending frequencies P(vbend,T) of H2O molecules in the liquid could be calculated from statistical distributions P(vOH,T) of stretching frequencies on the basis of the empirical correlation established for their mean values. It is found that correlations of different kinds fail to reproduce ...
Borrill Stephen J - - 2002
The threshold for detecting a narrow-band noise signal in the presence of one or more masking noise bands is higher when the signal and masker bands have the same envelope (i.e., are comodulated) than when they have independent envelopes. This is called a comodulation detection difference (CDD). CDD might be ...
Wilson Willard W - - 2002
Single units in the inferior colliculus (IC) in the C57Bl/6 inbred mouse strain were tested for their temporal processing ability as measured by their minimum gap threshold (MGT), the shortest silent interval in an ongoing white-noise stimulus which a unit could encode. After ascertaining the MGT in quiet, units were ...
Rajan R - - 2001
Centrifugal crossed and uncrossed medial olivocochlear systems (CMOCS and UMOCS) terminate on cochlear outer hair cells (OHCs) and exercise effects through a nicotinic cholinergic receptor. Hence their cochlear effects have not been differentiated. Recent work on protection from loud-sound-induced temporary threshold shifts (TTSs) in hearing sensitivity suggest the two OHC ...
Moore B C - - 2001
The inherent amplitude fluctuations in narrow bands of noise may limit the ability to detect gaps in the noise; 'dips' in the noise may be confused with the gap to be detected. For people with cochlear hearing loss, loudness recruitment may effectively magnify the fluctuations and this could partly account ...
Hammond G - - 2001
The early (R1) and late (R2) components of the cutaneous blink reflex in right-handed humans were recorded in three experiments to examine the lateral symmetry of a simple excitatory process in their brainstem pathways and of the control of the excitability of the pathways by gaps in acoustic noise. Experiment ...
Ghitza O - - 2001
Studies in neurophysiology and in psychophysics provide evidence for the existence of temporal integration mechanisms in the auditory system. These auditory mechanisms may be viewed as "detectors," parametrized by their cutoff frequencies. There is an interest in quantifying those cutoff frequencies by direct psychophysical measurement, in particular for tasks that ...
Culling J F - - 2001
Sensitivity to differences in interaural correlation was measured for 1.3-ERB-wide bands of noise using a 2IFC task at six frequencies: 250, 500, 750, 1000, 1250, and 1500 Hz. The sensitivity index, d', was measured for discriminations between a number of fixed pairs of correlation values. Cumulative d' functions were derived ...
Bodis-Wollner I - - 2001
Multiunit electrophysiological studies indicate that oscillatory activity is common in the awake mammalian central nervous system. Synchronous 20-80 Hz oscillations, so called gamma rhythms, have been proposed as a possible fundamental physiological mechanism of binding neuronal activity underlying object recognition. The purpose of this study was to determine whether or ...
MacMullen A - - 2001
A programmable ultra-low noise X-band exciter has been developed using commercial off-the-shelf components. Its phase noise is more than 10 dB below the best available microwave synthesizers. It covers a 7% frequency band with 0.1-Hz resolution. The X-band output at +23 dBm is a combination of signals from an X-band ...
Bregman A S - - 2001
Normally hearing adults heard rapid alternations of a pair of band-limited noise bursts that had flat spectra (in terms of equal-loudness weighting of components) and sharp band edges. The bursts differed in center frequency (CF), but were matched on overall intensity, on bandwidth (BW) on a log frequency scale, and ...
Grose J H - - 2001
Detection thresholds for temporal gaps between markers of dissimilar frequency are usually elevated with respect to thresholds for gaps between markers of similar frequency. Because gaps between markers of dissimilar frequency represent both a spectrally based perceptual discontinuity as well as a temporal discontinuity, it is not clear what factors ...
Thorpe C W - - 2001
Recordings of the rib cage and abdominal motions and acoustic output were obtained from five professional opera singers during performance of an aria recorded with two levels of voice projection. The condition of greater projection resulted in a significant increase in the acoustic power in the frequency band 2-4 kHz, ...
Schrauf M - - 2001
The visual resolution was measured in 184 healthy subjects using luminance contrast defined Landolt optotypes at eight different gap locations. The investigation used monocular detection for both eyes up to acuity thresholds. Acuity estimates were obtained under forced choice conditions and the threshold defined by a sensitive criterion. The results ...
Modinos A - - 2001
A brief introduction of the layer-Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker method for calculations of the frequency band structure of photonic crystals and of the transmission and reflection coefficients of light incident on slabs of such crystals is followed by two applications of the method. The first relates to the frequency band structure of metallodielectric ...
Popov V V - - 2001
Auditory brainstem responses (ABR) to clicks and noise bursts of various frequency bands and intensities were recorded in two bottlenosed dolphins, Tursiops truncatus. The purpose was to assess contributions of various parts of the cochlear partition to ABR and travelling wave velocity in the cochlea. At band-pass filtered stimuli (1-0.25 ...
Gómez C M - - 2001
The present report studied the contingent negative variation during Gap and Non-Gap conditions using visual stimulation and manual responses. The reaction times during the Gap condition were facilitated compared with those of the Non-Gap condition. The contingent negative variation component was obtained during the preparatory period from electrodes placed at ...
Fukuda M - - 2001
The dynamic organization of the olivocerebellar afferent input to Purkinje cells was examined in rat cerebellar cortex. The distribution of synchronous Purkinje cell complex spike activity was characterized, bilaterally, utilizing multiple electrode recordings in crus IIa folium under ketamine anaesthesia. The results confirmed the existence of rostrocaudal complex spike isochronicity ...
Clariá F - - 2000
The RT interval is a measure of the ventricular repolarization and is partially influenced by the sympathovagal balance. The analysis of the variation of the duration of the RT and RR intervals might bring new information about the arrhythmogenic vulnerability and autonomic imbalance. The RR signal and its spectral density ...
Phillips D P - - 2000
The ability of listeners to detect a temporal gap in a 1600-Hz-wide noiseband (target) was studied as a function of the absence and presence of concurrent stimulation by a second 1600-Hz-wide noiseband (distractor) with a nonoverlapping spectrum. Gap detection thresholds for single noisebands centered on 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, and 5.0 ...
Neil Gale
The relationship between canopy gaps and topography was examined in 12 ha of wet rain forest in lowland western Ecuador. Canopy gap and topographical data were recorded on a 10- × 5-m grid system. Each grid point was categorized as belonging to a low canopy gap (≤5 m height), a ...
Shimoyama I - - 2000
The fast Fourier transform (FFT) is a good method to estimate power spectral density (PSD), but the frequency resolution is limited to the sampling window, and thus the precise characteristics of PSD for short signals are not clear. To relax the limitation, a multiple band-pass filter was introduced to estimate ...
Chabaud P - - 2000
This study investigated how changes in nutritional motivation modulate odour-related oscillatory activities at several levels of the olfactory pathway in non-trained rats. Local field potential recordings were obtained in freely moving animals in the olfactory bulb (OB), anterior and posterior parts of the piriform cortex (APC and PPC respectively) and ...
Nakajima Y - - 2000
We present a new auditory illusion, the gap transfer illusion, supported by phenomenological and psychophysical data. In a typical situation, an ascending frequency glide of 2,500 msec with a temporal gap of 100 msec in the middle and a continuously descending frequency glide of 500 msec cross each other at ...
Wheat H E - - 2000
The aim of this study was to determine the acuity of the peripheral tactile system for gaps and to determine how stimulus orientation may impact on this. We quantified the ability of humans to discriminate small differences in gap width using a forced-choice task. Stimuli were presented passively to the ...
Warren R M - - 2000
An intelligibility of over 90% was reported for keywords in "everyday" 1/3-octave sentences centered on 1500 Hz and having steep transition band slopes of 100 dB/octave [Warren et al., Percept. Psychophys. 57, 175-182 (1995)]. A subsequent study by Warren and Bashford [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 106, L47-L52 (1999)] found that ...
Henning G B - - 2000
Two-alternative forced-choice procedures were used to measure the detectability of bright and dark bars at various locations across luminance patterns that produced Mach bands. Detection performance was significantly affected by both dark and bright Mach bands: poor detection performance was observed at locations near, but not in, the Mach bands; ...
Lister J J - - 2000
OBJECTIVE: This study was designed to measure the ability of listeners with and without sensorineural hearing loss to discriminate silent gaps between noise band markers of different frequencies presented in an anechoic and a reverberant listening environment. DESIGN: A two-interval, two-alternative, forced-choice paradigm was used to measure gap discrimination ability ...
Maison S - - 2000
The activity of the medial olivocochlear bundle (MOCB) can be studied in humans through variations in the level of evoked otoacoustic emissions (EOAEs) elicited by contralateral acoustic stimuli (CAS). The present study sought to investigate how the activity of the MOC system at a given frequency, as measured through the ...
Briffa M - - 2000
Hermit crabs, Pagurus bernhardus, sometimes exchange shells after a period of shell rapping, when the initiating or attacking crab brings its shell rapidly and repeatedly into contact with the shell of the noninitiator or defender in a series of bouts. Bouts are separated by pauses, and raps within bouts are ...
Schreiner C E - - 2000
Two fundamental aspects of frequency analysis shape the functional organization of primary auditory cortex. For one, the decomposition of complex sounds into different frequency components is reflected in the tonotopic organization of auditory cortical fields. Second, recent findings suggest that this decomposition is carried out in parallel for a wide ...
Snell K B - - 1999
The detectability of a masked sinusoid increases as its onset approaches the temporal center of a masker. This study was designed to determine whether a similar change in detectability would occur for a silent gap as it was parametrically displaced from the onset of a noise burst. Gap thresholds were ...
Müller M M - - 1999
The present study was designed to test differential hemispheric activation induced by emotional stimuli in the gamma band range (30-90 Hz). Subjects viewed slides with differing emotional content (from the International Affective Picture System). A significant valence by hemisphere interaction emerged in the gamma band from 30-50 Hz. Other bands, ...
Hussain A - - 1999
A speech enhancement scheme is presented using diverse processing in sub-bands spaced according to a human-cochlear describing function. The binaural adaptive scheme decomposes the wide-band input signals into a number of band-limited signals, superficially similar to the treatment the human ears perform on incoming signals. The results of a series ...
van Wieringen A - - 1999
Gap-detection thresholds were determined for different complex patterns of electrical stimulation in four postlingually deafened LAURA cochlear implantees, to examine the nature of within- and across-channel auditory processes in more detail. Gap detectability was examined as a function of stimulus complexity (one, two, or three channels), channel distance within and ...
Nalçaci E - - 1999
This research aimed to investigate callosal transfer in the different frequency bands of VEP to lateralized reversal of checkerboard pattern as stimuli. The chosen band pass filters (4-8 Hz, 8-15 Hz, 15-20 Hz, 20-32 Hz) were applied to the VEPs of subjects, and four different components for each VEP were ...
Rainville S J - - 1999
We investigated how the detection of mirror symmetry depends on the distribution of contrast energy across spatial scales. Stimuli consisted of vertically symmetric noise patterns with fractal power spectra defined by 1/f beta slopes (-2 < or = beta < or = 5). While overall rms contrast remained fixed at ...
Schneider B A - - 1999
Twenty normal hearing younger and twenty older adults in the early stages of presbycusis, but with relatively normal hearing at 2 kHz, were asked to discriminate between the presence versus absence of a gap between two equal-duration tonal markers. The duration of each marker was constant within a block of ...
Heinz M G - - 1999
The purpose of this study was to compare detection of increments and decrements occurring over limited regions of time and frequency within a 500-ms broadband (0-6000 Hz) noise. Three listeners tracked detection thresholds adaptively in a two-interval, two-alternative forced-choice task. Thresholds were measured for both increments and decrements in level ...
Sek A - - 1999
Thresholds were measured for detecting steps in frequency linked by glides of various durations. The goals were to assess the relative importance of place and temporal information for this task, and to determine whether there is a mechanism for detecting dynamic frequency changes per se, as opposed to comparing the ...
Izumi A - - 1999
Duration-discrimination thresholds of the silent interval (gap) between two successive tones (markers) were measured in four Japanese monkeys. The task was serial discrimination, and monkeys were required to release the lever when the gap duration decreased from 200 ms. Monkeys successfully acquired the task, and gap thresholds of monkeys were ...
Nalcaci E - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: Visual evoked potentials (VEP) have been used to estimate interhemispheric transfer time (IHTT). However, the complex wave of VEP is most probably formed by different generators of neural populations that act through different frequency channels. If the main peaks of VEP are established by different types of generators, which ...
St. Clair, Colleen Cassady; ...
Forest fragmentation and habitat loss may disrupt the movement or dispersal of forest-dwelling birds. Despite much interest in the severity of these effects and ways of mitigating them, little is known about actual movement patterns in different habitat types. We studied the movement of wintering resident birds, lured by playbacks ...
Schneider B - - 1998
Gap-detection thresholds were determined for 10 younger and 10 older adults at two sensation levels (40 and 60 dB SL) for tone pips with Gaussian amplitude envelopes whose standard deviations were 0.5, 1, 1.5, and 2 ms. Gap-detection thresholds were larger for the older participants under all conditions. For all ...
< 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 >