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Journal Article

Citation

Berglund B, Nilsson ME. Percept. Mot. Skills 2003; 97(3): 675-688.

Affiliation

Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, and Department of Psychology, Stockholm University, Sweden. birber@mbox.ki.se

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

14738327

Abstract

Listeners' ability to identify road-traffic, aircraft, or train sounds in environmental sound recordings was studied in a psychoacoustical experiment involving 16 participants. In free-labeling identification, excerpt traffic sounds were described in terms of "object" (sound-producing source) rather than in terms of perceptual attribute. The main sounds identified were traffic sounds, but a few references were also made to machine-related or water-related sources. Sounds from aircraft were easier to identify than the sounds from trains, which in turn were easier to identify than the sounds from road-traffic. This identification order was confirmed in multiple-choice and dominant-source identification tasks. Compared to free-labeling, multiple-choice identifications produced considerably more false alarms, i.e., identification of a sound source not present. For multiple-choice, several sound sources were particularly identified in the excerpt of road-traffic and train sounds although the (recorded) sound was typically clearly discerned in the joint dominant-source identification task. A comparison of the acoustic properties of the traffic sounds suggested that spectral rather than temporal cues were used in sound-source identification.


Language: en

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