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Organization in audition by similarity in rate of change: Evidence from tracking individual frequency glides in mixtures
Authors:Leslie Maggie Perrin Mcpherson  Valter Ciocca  Albert S. Bregman
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, McGill University, Stewart Biological Sciences Building, 1205 Avenue Docteur Penfield, H3A 1B1, Montréal, Quebec, Canada
Abstract:In audition, sound energy is assigned to separate auditory “streams” following principles of organization that closely parallel the visual gestalt principles that guide the perception of distinct forms or objects. Metzger (1934) provided evidence for organization in vision based on similarity in the velocity of moving forms. If two dots approach one another along one spatial dimension, they may appear to cross and continue beyond their meeting point if their velocities differ; otherwise, they usually appear to change direction abruptly and retrace their movements. If an analogous auditory principle exists, with rate of change in frequency substituted for velocity of movement, two frequency glides that sweep through the same frequency range in opposite directions should be able to perceptually cross if their rates of change differ; otherwise, they should usually appear to change direction and retrace the same frequency region. Four experiments provided data in support of this hypothesis, and the results were consistent across experiments with varying stimuli and methods of presentation. When properties of the stimuli favored organization according to a principle of frequency proximity, the effect of a principle of rate similarity was attenuated but still evident.
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