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Tonal frequency shifts and gaps in acoustic stimulation as reflex-modifying events
Authors:Jacquelyn Cranney  Howard S. Hoffman  Michelle E. Cohen
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Bryn Mawr College, 19010, Bryn Mawr, PA
Abstract:When a relatively weak signal, such as a mild tone, precedes an intense reflex-eliciting stimulus by an appropriate interval (about 100 msec), the amplitude of the elicited reaction is often reduced. It was found that in student volunteers a brief gap in a steady pure tone that occurred 150 msec prior to a mild tap to the glabella (the flat region between the eyebrows) could inhibit the eyeblink elicited by the tap. It was also found that a shift in tonal frequency across a gap in a tone was more inhibitory than a gap with no frequency shift, but it was no more inhibitory than the onset of the short second tone alone. The final study determined the minimum amount of frequency shift required to produce an additional inhibitory effect above that of a gap alone. The findings are discussed in terms of various aspects of sensory processing.
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