No subject


Fri Apr 16 16:22:23 UTC 2010


have easy access to the engineering library where all these papers are
stashed...

The human ear has two physically discrete audio sensory mechanisms.  A
pitch-pased mechanism that finely distinguishes pure tones, and an
'energy' mechanism that responds much faster, mostly to impulses, with
no tonal discrimination.  These two mechanisms are reconciled in
'wetware', partly by backdating pure tone discrimination as the
impulse/energy mechanism is much faster.  These papers offered nerve
potential measurements to illustrate the relative reaction speeds.

The assertion was that pure tone discrimination ends around 20kHz, but
that the impulse/energy mechanism is capable of sensing and
integrating energy up to about a 100kHz bandlimit.

There has also been some research of genetic gifts that grant pure
tone discrimination well above 20kHz.  It appears to be discrete
genetic trait.  I have always wondered if it ran in my family since
I've always been able to 'hear' ultrasonic burglar alarms, though I've
been losing that ability as I age.  When I tested my own hearing for
Vorbis-related research some time ago, my ATH and tonal perception
curves appeared to be similar to the published numbers for typical
individuals.

Monty


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