The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1.

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The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1

Transcript of The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1.

Page 1: The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1.

The ear and perception of sound(Psychoacoustics)

General Physics VersionUpdated 2014July07

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Page 2: The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1.

Outline

A. Structure of the Ear

B. Perception of Loudness (Energy)

C. Perception of Pitch (Frequency)

D. References

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Page 3: The ear and perception of sound (Psychoacoustics) General Physics Version Updated 2014July07 1.

Introduction

Psychoacoustics

is the study of

subjective human perception

of sounds.

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A. The Structure of the Ear

The length of the auditory canal has been greatly exaggerated

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A.1 Outer Ear Amplifies Sound

Auditory canal is a resonator at approximately 2000 to 5000 Hertz.

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A.2 The Middle Ear•The bones (ossicles) of the middle ear form a lever which “amplifies” the displacement by a factor of 3x.

•The stirrup transfers the force to the much smaller area of the oval window, resulting in 10 to 30 x increase in pressure level

•Overall the sound is amplified by as much as 1000x or 30 dB

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A.3 Inner Ear Senses Sound

Reference: http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/sound/place.html#c1

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Over 20,000 hair cells!

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B. Perception of Loudness

1. Fechner’s law and decibel scale

2. Discrimination (jnd)

3. Threshold of hearing

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1. Which sounds half as loud as first?• Reference: http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/dB.html

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1b. Decibels: Fechner’s Law

• 1860 Fechner’s Law

• As stimuli are increased by multiplication, sensations increase by addition (Sensation grows as the logarithm of the stimulus)

• Example: A 10x bigger intensity sound is “heard” as only 2x bigger by the ear

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Gustav Theodor Fechner(1801-1887)

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1c. Decibel Scale

• The decibel is a logarithmic scale

• A multiplicative factor of 10x in intensity is +10 db

• 0 db is threshold of hearing• 1 db is just noticeable difference• 15 db is a whisper• 60 db is talking• 120 db is maximum safe level• 150 db is jet engine (ear damage)• 180 db stun grenade

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==================Power Ratio dB___________________0.5 -31 02 +35 +710 1020 1350 17100 201000 3010000 40==================

21210 10

10m

W atts

IntensityLogdB

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2a. JND: Just Noticeable Difference is 1dB• Reference: http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/dB.html

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2b Discrimination of Loudness

• jnd = “just noticeable difference”

• The ear’s “jnd” for Loudness is approximately 1 dB

• Or, sound must be 30% louder in intensity for us to just notice that it is louder.

• This depends somewhat on frequency (pitch) and loudness (intensity). We have trouble distinguishing changes in loudness for very the very loud or the very soft sounds

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2c. Smaller than JND (7% change)• Reference: http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/dB.html

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3a. Threshold of Hearing & Age (Presbycusis)

Note “Sound Pressure dB” (or SPLdB) is approximately half regular “energy” decibels (dB).

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3b. Hearing Threshold

• The ear can hear as small as 10-12 Watts/m2

(one trillionth of a watt per square meter)( 0.000,000,000,001 Watt/m2 )

• Example: you might be able to hear someone talking half a mile away under ideal circumstances

• Intensity is proportional to thesquare of the pressure amplitudeMinimum ear can hear is 0.000,02 Pascals(Atmospheric pressure is 100,000 Pascal)

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3c Phon & Equal Loudness Level

The Fletcher-Munson curves are a way of mapping the dB of a pure tone to the perceived loudness level in phons.

17Hearing Threshold changes with frequency. The “Phon” scale is a frequency-adjusted decibel scale based upon perception. Hence 0 Phon is always the threshold, and 10 Phon “sounds” like its 10 dB louder.

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3d Steven’s “Phon”

• Ear is found NOT to exactly follow Fechner’s logarithmic law (i.e. decibel scale).

• Stanley Smith Stevens (1906–1973)proposes “Phon”, which matches dB at 1000 Hertz.

• 0 Phon is the threshold of hearing, which is adjusted for frequency (for example, at 100 Hertz,0 Phon is equivalent to 35 dB)

• Perception of loudness is also frequency dependent.– 1000 Hertz: 10 dB is perceived as 10 phon– 100 Hertz: 10 dB is perceived as 16 phon

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C. Perception of Pitch

1. Range of Hearing

2. Pitch Discrimination and jnd

3. Combination tones

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1a Range of Hearing

Humans can hear from 16 to 20,000 Hertz(In terms of music, this is about 10 octaves)Piano only goes from 27.5 to 4186 Hertz

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1b Test Hearing

• High Frequency Test

• http://audiocheck.net/audiotests_frequencycheckhigh.php

• Low Frequency Test

• http://audiocheck.net/audiotests_frequencychecklow.php

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2a. Pitch Discrimination

• At 1000 Hz, the “jnd” is about 1 Hz (0.1%)

• At 4000 Hz, the “jnd” is about 10 Hz (0.25%)

• Above 10,000 Hz, our discrimination is terrible.(Most music is in range of 30 to 4000 Hertz)

• We can distinguish approximately 5000 different tones

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2b. Beats• Two tones closer than 15 Hertz we hear as a “fused”

tone (average of frequencies) with a “beat”.

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Demo: http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/beats.html#sounds

400401

400403

400410

400420

400440

400450

400480

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3. Combination Tones

• When tones are far enough apart we hear them as two distinct tones

• We also hear differenceand sum tones thatare not really there(Tartini Tones 1714)

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Demo: http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/beats.html#Tartini

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D. References & Online Demos• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weber-Fechner_law• http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/dBNoFlash.html• http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/uncertainty.html• http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/beats.html• http://audiocheck.net/audiotests_frequencycheckhigh.php• http://audiocheck.net/audiotests_frequencychecklow.php

• Demos:• http://www.isvr.soton.ac.uk/SPCG/Tutorial/Tutorial/Tutorial_files/

Web-hearing-Shepard.htm

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D. Notes• Excluded SONE scale of hearing

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