In article , םחכילטמ
wrote:
Hello,
In addition to the Fletcher-Munson equal loudness curves describing our
psycho-acoustic response, are there any curves to describe distortion in
the ears?
ie. Does each set of ears/brain have a second and third order
intermodulation intercept point?
ie. Can you be bombarded with large SPLs of pure sinewaves at 20kHz and
24kHz and perceive 4kHz (F2-F1) and 16kHz (2F1-F2).
I'm sure it's vastly more complicated than this....?
As Arny has said, "yes"... :-)
There are a number of physiological measurements that show things like the
levels of two-tone intermodulation effects in the ear. The real difficulty
is in interpeting the meaning of such measurements as the brain processes
the output of the ear sensor system and the resulting perceptions then
attempts to 'take this into account' in a complex signal-dependent manner.
You don't need either high powers or high freqencies to observe nonlinear
responses in the ear. IIRC many of the papers use just a few kHz.
The papers I have on this are at work. If I remeber to do so, I'll note the
main review paper reference I found and post it later on in case you are
interested.
Slainte,
Jim
--
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Barbirolli Soc.
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