Hearing in Complex Environments

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Learning Objectives

Be able to describe what the direct-to-reverberant ratio is.

Know how expectation let us understand distance.

Imagine an angry customer at a retail store yelling that he can’t find the swim shorts he wants in his size (the ones with the smiling sharks). You’re annoyed, but you can tell that the 28-year-old is far away from you just by how loud he is to you, so you just steer clear of the children’s swim section. This is an example of a direct-to-reverberant sound. When we listen to something, that is the direct source, and the reflection of the sound to us allows us to gain information about the location and distance of said object. The direct-to-reverberant sound is the ratio of a sound’s reverberation time to when we hear it. The ratio also includes the amount of that reflected sound we are not picking up and is lost.

Our expectations about sounds helps us understand the distance of the sound we are hearing. For instance, we know a whisper is quiet, so if we were to hear the whisper loudly, we would know the distance of the sound is shorter and closer to us than if a whisper was more quiet, meaning it’s further away from us. This is the same with louder sounds as well. For example, we know that train noises are loud, so when we hear the train more quietly, we know the train or the source of the sound is much further away.

 

Fig. 7.6.1. We perceive things that are typically loud as far away when they sound quieter than we expect. (Credit: Jarod Davis. Provided by: University of Minnesota. License: CC-BY 4.0)

 

Exercises

  1. True or False: If someone is yelling from a far away distance, they can sound more quieter than we normally expect them to.
  2. According to expectation, if the sound of someone whispering is loud, you expect them to be:
    A. far away from you
    B. close to you
  3. True or False: Humans use sounds as cues for distance, the louder a sound is, the closer it is.

Answer Key:

  1. True
  2. B
  3. True

 

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Cheryl Olman PSY 3031 Detailed Outline
Provided by: University of Minnesota
Download for free at http://vision.psych.umn.edu/users/caolman/courses/PSY3031/
License of original source: CC Attribution 4.0
Adapted by: Rachel Lam

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Introduction to Sensation and Perception Copyright © 2022 by Students of PSY 3031 and Edited by Dr. Cheryl Olman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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