When a sound enters the ear it sets up a vibration pattern along the basilar membrane. This vibration pattern initiates nerve pulses which travel along the eighth nerve to the brain, where a second pattern of neural activity results. Two general methods may be used to study these patterms: (1) the objective measurement of cortical potentials by the electro‐physiologist, and (2) subjective measurements such as masking and fatigue effects. The present paper is based on the latter procedure in which the results of loudness and fatigue tests have been combined to give patterns of cortical activity in terms of millisones per kappa‐band. Use of fatigue patterns permits employment of a low level probe tone which overcomes the difficulties formerly experienced with artifacts in masking patterns due to beats and distortion products.
Skip Nav Destination
,
Article navigation
January 01 1949
Loudness Patterns—A New Approach Free
W. A. Munson;
W. A. Munson
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill, New Jersey
Search for other works by this author on:
Mark B. Gardner
Mark B. Gardner
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill, New Jersey
Search for other works by this author on:
W. A. Munson
Mark B. Gardner
Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill, New Jersey
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 21, 59 (1949)
Citation
W. A. Munson, Mark B. Gardner; Loudness Patterns—A New Approach. J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 1 January 1949; 21 (1_Supplement): 59. https://doi.org/10.1121/1.1917047
Download citation file:
89
Views
Citing articles via
Focality of sound source placement by higher (ninth) order ambisonics and perceptual effects of spectral reproduction errors
Nima Zargarnezhad, Bruno Mesquita, et al.
A survey of sound source localization with deep learning methods
Pierre-Amaury Grumiaux, Srđan Kitić, et al.
Drawer-like tunable ventilated sound barrier
Yong Ge, Yi-jun Guan, et al.
Related Content
Mutual Problems of the Physicist, the Physiologist, and the Audiologist
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (January 1949)
A Movie—Some Physical Aspects of Conduction Deafness
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (January 1949)
Masking at Various Levels of the Auditory System
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (January 1949)
Assessment of Impaired Hearing by Articulation Scores
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (January 1949)
Determination of the “Better” Ear in Bilateral Impairment of Hearing
J. Acoust. Soc. Am. (January 1949)