Title: Psychophysics of the basic sound dimensions
1Psychophysics of the basic sound dimensions
- Perfecto Herrera
- Music Perception and Cognition
2Physical and perceptual features of sounds
- Waveform amplitude -gt Loudness
- (the larger, the louder)
- Waveform period -gt Pitch
- (the longer, the lower)
- Waveform shape -gt Timbre
- (the more rippled far from sinusoidal-, the
richer)
3Psychophysical Laws
- Mathematical expressions relating a physical
property with a perceptual sensation - Response f (sensory stimulation)
- Is f linear, potential, exponential?
- Are sensations totally independent?
- Collect subjective judgments when presenting
different intensities, pitches, along a single
dimension - Find the best fit between the physical magnitudes
and the perceptual estimations - Be careful with physiological constraints -gt
Frequency resolution of the ear, Energy
integration, Firing rate limitations
4Psychophysical Laws
- Which is the absolute threshold for a sensation
to happen? - Is it interacting with another physical feature?
- Which is the relative threshold (just noticeable
difference, JND)? - Is it fixed for all the range of physical
stimulation values?
5Differential thresholds
- Which is the minimum difference that can be
perceived with relation to a given sensation? - Just noticeable difference (JND) or
Differential threshold - Listen one sound, then another, then decide if
they are the same or they are different. - The first difference or jump that is noticed by
more than 75 of the listeners is considered to
be the JND for that sensation
6Absolute and differential thresholds
7Psychophysical Laws
- Fechners Law R k log(I)
- R is the sensation, I is the physical property, k
a constant to be found or adjusted from the data - Webers Law ?I/I k
- The just-detectable change in stimulus intensity
(jnd or DL) is proportional to the intensity - Stevens Law R kIp
8 9Intensity (physical magnitude)
- I p2/?c
- p is the pressure of the air in a given point of
space and time - ? is the density of the air
- c is the speed of sound in the medium where it is
being transmitted - ?c 40 dines per centimeter.
10Compression and rarefaction
11Loudness
- The subjective sensation generated by the
intensity of the air pressure is called Loudness
12Hearing Loudness thresholds
- MAF (minimum audible field) pressure measured
in the free field where a listeners head would
be. The sound source is directly in front of the
listener. - MAP (minimum audible pressure) pressure
measured in the ear canal. Thresholds are
measured in one ear only. - Differences in the two measures are due to some
binaural advantage, outer-ear filtering (mid
frequencies), and physiological noise (low
frequencies).
13Absolute thresholds
- Minimum audible pressure
- 0.0002 dines/cm2
- 0.0002 microbars
- 20 micropascals 10-16 W/cm2
- Pressure causing pain, not sound sensation 20hPa
- 1hPa 1 x 108 micropascals
- The atmospheric presssure is measured in
hectopascals - Normal athmospheric pressure 1013 hPa
- 130dB 63Pa 0.63 hPa
- A sudden drop of 1hPa storm approaching- may
cause our ears hurt (gt130dB change) !!!
14Hearing Level
- Threshold of hearing, relative to the average of
the normal population. - For example, the average threshold at 1 kHz is
about 4 dB SPL. (dBHL) - HL expresses the amount the threshold has been
raised compared to the normal population - It deteriorates with age, drug and food
consumption and behaviour patterns
15The dBSPL
- Unit preferred to measure the Sound Pressure
Level - It usually ranges from 0 to 130
- Uses the minimum audible pressure as reference
value (P0 ) - What does 0dBSPL mean? No pressure?
- dBSPL 20 log(P/P0).
- dBs are not additive (20dB20dBltgt40dB)
16Loudness Scaling
- Can we order loudness sensations (i.e., this
sound has twice the loudness than another one)? - L k I0.3 (I Intensity Stevens Law)
- So, a 10-dB increase in level gives a doubling in
loudness. - This provides the basis for the loudness scale,
measured in Sones. - A 1-kHz at 40 dB SPL is defined as having a
loudness of 1 Sone. So, a 1-kHz tone at 50 dB SPL
has a loudness of about 2 Sones (twice as loud),
_at_60dB -gt 4 Sones, _at_70db -gt 8 Sones
17Equal Loudness Contours
- 1 kHz is used as a reference. By definition, a
1-kHz tone at a level of 40 dB SPL has a loudness
level of 40 phons. - Any sound producing the same loudness (no matter
what its SPL) as the reference tone also has a
loudness level of 40 phons. - Sones versus Phons (?)
- Equal-loudness contours are produced using
loudness matching experiments
18Equal Loudness estimation
Skovenborg, Quesnel, Nielsen (2004). Loudness
assessment of music and speech, 116th convention
of the AES
19Equal Loudness Contours
80-100 phon curves are flatter -gt consequences
for mixing?
Low and high frequencies have to be raised in
intensity, specially when listening at soft
levels -gt consequences for home amplifiers?
a.k.a Isophonic curves or Fletcher Munson
curves
20Equal Loudness Contours
- Interpret / Explain (voluntary homework)
- A tone has 64 sones
- A tone has 60 phones
- A tone has 60 dBSPL
- Two tones are isophonic
- If 1kHz _at_ 50 phones gives 2 sones, may 100Hz _at_ 40
phones give 2 sones? - Which one has a higher intensity, a tone of 40
phones or a tone of 50 phones?
21Loudness weighting scales
- Filters are used in loudness meters to compensate
for the changes in loudness as a function of
frequency - dB(A) A weighting 40 phon curve (approx.)
- dB(B) B weighting 70 phon curve (approx.)
- dB(C) C weighting essentially flat -high
sound pressure levels with LF presence.
22Loudness and duration
- Energy integration time lt 200ms
- The longer the tone, the louder, up to 150ms
23Differential thresholds
- Just noticeable differences for a 1kHz tone and
for white noise they have been estimated using
the modulation method (modulation rate 4Hz). For
the sinusoidal case, the sensitivity increases
with the intensity level of the tone
24Neural coding of intensity
- Schematic illustration of input-output functions
on the basilar membrane (response measured as
movement of the BM) - The solid line shows a typical function in a
normal ear for a sinewave input with frequency
close to the characteristic frequency - The dashed line shows the function that would be
observed in an ear in which the active mechanism
was not operating
25Neural coding of intensity
- Firing rates of single auditory neurons as a
function of stimulus level (rate-versus-level
functions) - In each case, the stimulus was a sinewave at the
characteristic frequency of the neuron. Curves
(a), (b), and (c) are typical of what is observed
for neurons with high, medium, and low
spontaneous firing rates, respectively
26Neural coding of intensity
- It is mainly coded by means of firing rates the
higher the intensity the higher the rate but - A single neuron dynamic range (_at_ 35 dB) does not
explain dynamic range of auditory system (_at_ 140
dB) so.. - The outputs of many different types of cells
together may determine perception of loudness - Loudness increases as several well-separated
neurons fire around the same moment (remember the
critical band issue)
27Loudness of complex sounds
- Does loudness increase adding energy at any place
in the spectrum?
- We have to consider the frequency resolution of
our hearing system
28Loudness of complex sounds
- Peripheral processing (filtering according to the
outer and middle ear specificities) - Computation of the excitation pattern considering
the masking effects (cochlea neural firing
approximation) - 3. Conversion of the excitation pattern into
band-specific loudness computation. - 4. Summation of the specific band-loudness into
the final loudness value - Loudness increases (additively) only when there
is energy beyond the critical band