Title: Sound
1Sound
2A- The displacement component of sound B-
Compression and Rarefraction C- model closed
auditory receptor D- Pressure as a function of
time (sound wave).
3- Displacement of molecules forms a sine wave of
high and low pressure - Period (seconds) 1/frequency (Hz)
- Period is inversely related to frequency- freq
1/period - For any given freq, the greater the fluctuations
of pressure, the greater the amplitude (dB) and
the louder the sound.
4- Decibel (dB) is a relative measurement- how much
greater the sound pressure is than for a
reference sound (average threshold of human
hearing, 0 dB) - Sound pressure level (SPL) measured in decibels
(dB) is a log scale. - SPL 10 times greater than human threshold is 20
dB because 20 log 20 log 10 20. - A sound 100 times greater than threshold would
be 40 dB - Thus the 10 to the 10 times range of human
hearing can be represented in a roughly 200 dB
range using a log scale.
5Sound Propagation
Displacement component- rigid chains
Pressure component- compressible chains
6- Wavelength (m)
- speed of sound (m/s) / freq.
- 334 / Hz
7- Recap
- Distance wavelength 330/ Hz
- Time period 1/Hz
- speed of sound about 1 ft/msec
- Frequency 1/period
- 1000 Hz 1 kHz
- Example Period of 1000 Hz 1 sec/1000 Hz 1
msec - Wavelength of 1000 Hz 330/1000 .33 m 33 cm
1 ft
8Freq. Wavelength Period 100 3.3 m 10
msec 1000 33 cm 1 msec 10,000 3.3 cm 100
usec 100,000 3.3 mm 10 usec
9- Near field 1 wavelength air displacement
- Far field gt 1 wavelength compression/rarefrac
tion - Example Red-winged blackbird- can hear mate
100 m away- 2.5 kHz mating call has a wavelength
of .13 m- therefore bird must have pressure
sensitive (not displacement) hearing. - Pressure component becomes reduced as it travels
for two reasons
1) Spherical Spreading- SPL drops by 6 dB every
time the distance from the sound source is
doubled. 2) Excess Attenuation- absorption of
sound by the air and absorption or reflection by
solid objects in the sound path. Why then, are
do higher frequencies exhibit greater Excess
Attenuation?
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11- Harmonics
- Natural sounds are complex, consisting of
several frequencies, all propagating
simultaneously. - Consider a piano string-
- Animal vocalizations are produced by forcing air
over a membrane- causing the membrane to vibrate-
thus creating harmonics
12- Sound localization
- Horizontal cue- Interaural Time Differences
(ITDs) carrier or envelope, onset-offset or
on-going - Horizontal cue- Interaural Intensity Differences
(IIDs) - Vertical cue- Spectral cues, monaural or binaural
13- Interaural phase differences- using time
differences in the carrier frequency- the phase
angle of the sound wave- IPDs
140
180
same pressure
Decreasing head diameter causes such small
interaural distances that ITDs can not be
resolved in by binaural processing in the central
auditory system- solution? IIDs
15Phase ambiguity- Interaural distance must be less
than 1/2 a wavelength for useful time comparison
between the ears at that frequency. Ideally want
1/4 the wavelength
16- Using this information
- (Useable interaural time difference) 700 us
1/2 period - 1 period 1400 us 1.4 ms
- freq 1/period 1/1400 714 Hz
- Wavelength 330/714 Hz .46 m 46 cm
- 46/2 23 cm 9.2 interaural distance
- If a sound is coming from right, a 714 Hz tone
will be 180 out of phase between the two ears-
therefore highest frequency that possesses
useable ITDs will be slightly less than half the
wavelength. - So, Hz must be less than 714.
17- Duplex theory of sound localization
- 1) IIDs are poor at low frequency (due to reduced
sound shadows) - 2) ITDs are poor at high frequency (due to phase
ambiguity) - Thus, species use ITDs at low freq. and IIDs at
high freq. - Example- human localization w/ tones
Errors
IIDs
ITDs
100
1000
10000
18Brainstem section Superior olivary complex (SOC)-
LSO (IIDs)
MSO (ITDs)
Left ear
Right ear
19Duplex theory recap ITDs 1) Auditory nerve must
phase lock 2) Low Hz hearing 3) highest Hz used-
wavelength lt 1/2 interaural distance 4) enough
neuron sensitivity 5) MSO IIDs 1) need good
intensity differences 2) High Hz hearing 3)
enough neuron sensitivity 4) LSO
20- Exception
- Pallid bat
- Uses low frequency to localize prey
- Therefore, poor IIDs
- But also very small head- poor ITDs
- So, what to do?
- ITDs using the envelope (onset, offset)
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22Barn Owl Sound Localization
IIDs
ITDs
23Vertical localization (IIDs) - asymmetrical
ears - facial ruff