Handbook of Psychology, Volume 4: Experimental Psychology
138 Audition M 0 S 0. If the masker is M 0 , but the signal is presented with a 180 ( radians) interaural phase difference, the ...
Sound Source Segregation 139 frequency of the two vowels is made to differ, then often vowel recognition is improved. Because a ...
140 Audition Common Onsets and Offsets It is often the case that although sounds from different sources may occur at about the s ...
Sound Source Segregation 141 amplitude modulated (unmodulated masker) is added simul- taneously to the amplitude-modulated probe ...
142 Audition over time. This is in contrast to the critical-band approach to explaining auditory processing, in which only a nar ...
An Overview of the Future Study of Audition 143 important clues for understanding normal audition, the ge- netic revolution has ...
144 Audition function those circuits and fibers play in hearing. This is per- haps understandable because most of functional hea ...
References 145 Fletcher, H. (1953).Speech and hearing in communication.New York: Van Nostrans. Geisler, C. D. (1998). From sound ...
146 Audition Shaw, E. A. G. (1974). The external ear. In W. D. Keidel & W. D. Neff (Eds.), Handbook of Sensory Physiology: V ...
CHAPTER 6 Touch ROBERTA L. KLATZKY AND SUSAN J. LEDERMAN 147 TOUCH DEFINED AS AN ACTIVE, MULTISENSORY SYSTEM 148 THE NEUROPHYSIO ...
148 Touch modalities represent different priorities, with touch empha- sizing information about material properties and vision e ...
The Neurophysiology of Touch149 Epidermis Dermis Subcutis Ruffini Pacinian Merkel Meissner Figure 6.1Vertical section of the gla ...
150 Touch in comparison to cutaneous mechanoreceptors. For further details on kinesthesis, see reviews by Clark and Horch (1986) ...
Sensory Aspects of Touch 151 BACK THIGH BELLY SHOULDER UPPER LIP 12 34 BREAST CHEEK SOLE CALF 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 MEA ...
152 Touch Neurophysiological evidence by Johansson and his col- leagues (see review by Johansson & Westling, 1990) has clear ...
Haptic Perception of Properties of Objects and Surfaces 153 enveloped in hands or limbs, bringing in the contribution of kinesth ...
154 Touch both of which should alter vibration; they were also unaf- fected by either low- or high-frequency vibrotactile adapta ...
Haptic Perception of Properties of Objects and Surfaces 155 suggested that material affected perceived weight because ob- jects ...
156 Touch contact position contact position position origin local attitude base-to-peak height difference radius of curvature ...
Haptic Perception of Properties of Objects and Surfaces 157 Static contact—associated with temperature encoding; characterized b ...
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