Discrimination of the phase of amplitude modulation applied to different carriers: Effects of modulation rate and modulation depth for young and older subjects

The discrimination of amplitude modulation (AM) from frequency modulation (FM) of a 1000-Hz carrier, with equally detectable AM and FM, is better for a 2-Hz than for a 10-Hz modulation rate. This might reflect greater sensitivity to temporal fine structure for low than for high rates. Alternatively,...

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Published inThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Vol. 146; no. 3; pp. 1696 - 1704
Main Authors Moore, Brian C. J., Sęk, Aleksander P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.09.2019
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ISSN0001-4966
1520-8524
1520-8524
DOI10.1121/1.5126515

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Summary:The discrimination of amplitude modulation (AM) from frequency modulation (FM) of a 1000-Hz carrier, with equally detectable AM and FM, is better for a 2-Hz than for a 10-Hz modulation rate. This might reflect greater sensitivity to temporal fine structure for low than for high rates. Alternatively, AM-FM discrimination may depend on comparing fluctuations in excitation level on the two sides of the excitation pattern, which are in phase for AM and out of phase for FM. Discrimination of the relative phase of fluctuations might worsen with increasing rate, which could account for the effect of rate on AM-FM discrimination. To test this, discrimination of the phase of AM applied to two sinusoidal carriers was assessed, with a band of noise between the two carriers to prevent use of within-channel cues. Young and older subjects with normal hearing were tested. Performance was almost constant for AM rates from 2 to 10 Hz, but worsened at 20 Hz. Performance was near chance for AM depths near the detection threshold. The results suggest that the superior AM-FM discrimination at 2 Hz cannot be explained in terms of comparison of the phase of fluctuations on the two sides of the excitation pattern.
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ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/1.5126515