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  2. Critical band - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_band

    As increasing the level makes the low frequency slope shallower, by increasing its amplitude, low frequencies mask high frequencies more than at a lower input level. The auditory filter can reduce the effects of a masker when listening to a signal in background noise using off-frequency listening.

  3. Psychoacoustics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychoacoustics

    For example, the interference of two pitches can often be heard as a repetitive variation in the volume of the tone. This amplitude modulation occurs with a frequency equal to the difference in frequencies of the two tones and is known as beating. The semitone scale used in Western musical notation is not a linear frequency scale but logarithmic.

  4. Hypersonic effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypersonic_effect

    It is a common understanding in psychoacoustics that the ear cannot respond to sounds at such high frequency via an air-conduction pathway, so one question that this research raised was: does the hypersonic effect occur via the "ordinary" route of sound travelling through the air passage in the ear, or in some other way?

  5. Neuronal noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuronal_noise

    Neuronal activity at the microscopic level has a stochastic character, with atomic collisions and agitation, that may be termed "noise." [4] While it isn't clear on what theoretical basis neuronal responses involved in perceptual processes can be segregated into a "neuronal noise" versus a "signal" component, and how such a proposed dichotomy could be corroborated empirically, a number of ...

  6. Sound symbolism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_symbolism

    Sound symbolism is used in commerce for the names of products and even companies themselves. [20] For example, a car company may be interested in how to name their car to make it sound faster or stronger. Furthermore, sound symbolism can be used to create a meaningful relationship between a company's brand name and the brand mark itself.

  7. Auditory illusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auditory_illusion

    Hearing a missing fundamental frequency, given other parts of the harmonic series; Various psychoacoustic tricks of lossy audio compression; McGurk effect; Octave illusion/Deutsch's high–low illusion; Auditory pareidolia: hearing indistinct voices in random noise. The Shepard–Risset tone or scale, and the Deutsch tritone paradox; Speech-to ...

  8. Psychometric function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychometric_function

    A common example is visual acuity testing with an eye chart. The person sees symbols of different sizes (the size is the relevant physical stimulus parameter) and has to decide which symbol it is. Usually, there is one line on the chart where a subject can identify some, but not all, symbols.

  9. Grey noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grey_noise

    Grey noise spectrum The result is that grey noise contains all frequencies with equal loudness , as opposed to white noise , which contains all frequencies with equal energy . The difference between the two is the result of psychoacoustics , more specifically the fact that the human hearing is more sensitive to some frequencies than others.