Oye, Mike. Auditory azimuthal localization performance in water as a function of...+

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

DocVikingo

Senior Member
Rest in Peace
Messages
5,721
Reaction score
474
Thought you might find this interesting.

"Hum Factors. 2014 Jun;56(4):772-83.
Auditory azimuthal localization performance in water as a function of prior exposure.

Savel S, Drake C.
Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

We report two psychoacoustical experiments that assessed the relationship between auditory azimuthal localization performance in water and duration of prior exposure to the milieu.
BACKGROUND:

The adaptability of spatial hearing abilities has been demonstrated in air for both active and passive exposures to altered localization cues. Adaptability occurred faster and was more complete for elevation perception than for azimuth perception. In water, spatial hearing is believed to solely rely on smaller than normal cues-to-azimuth: interaural time differences. This should produce a medial bias in localization judgments toward the center of the horizontal plane, unless the listeners have adapted to the environment.
METHOD:

Azimuthal localization performance was measured in seawater for eight azimuthal directions of a low-frequency (< 500 Hz) auditory target. Seventeen participants performed a forced-choice task in Experiment 1. Twenty-eight other participants performed a pointing task in Experiment 2.
RESULTS:

In both experiments we observed poor front/back discrimination but accurate left/right discrimination, regardless of prior exposure. A medial bias was found in azimuth perception, whose size decreased as the exposure duration of the participant increased.
CONCLUSION:

The study resembles earlier results showing that passive exposure to altered azimuth cues elicits the adaptability of internal audio-spatial maps, that is, the behavioral plasticity of spatial hearing abilities.
APPLICATION:

Studies of the adaptability of the auditory system to altered spatial information may yield practical implications for scuba divers, hearing-impaired listeners with reduced sensitivity to spatial cues, and various normal-hearing users of virtual auditory displays."

Cheers,

DocV
 
That IS cool! I'll bet that in a few years we will be communicating underwater with our buddies via speech without the need for FFMs. Some people would consider that progress, others might miss the silence.
 
They should try this test with the Pro-Ear mask. Subjectively, I thought it gave me better directional sound discrimination. Of course with one bad ear (hence a Pro-Ear mask user) my sound discrimination isn't so good anyhow.
 

Back
Top Bottom