Sunday, March 9, 2008

Research news: More than meets the ear in successful cocktail party conversations

The News:
More Than Meets The Ear In Successful Cocktail Party Conversations
ScienceDaily (Mar. 8, 2008) — Just picture the scene: you're at a cocktail party, talking to someone you would like to get to know better but the background noise is making it hard to concentrate. Luckily, humans are very gifted at listening to someone speaking while many other people are talking loudly at the same time. This so-called cocktail-party-phenomenon is based on the ability of the human auditory system to decompose the acoustic world into discrete objects of perception.
It was originally believed that the major acoustic cue used by the auditory system to solve this task was directional information of the sound source, but even though localisation of different sound sources with two ears improves the performance, it can be achieved monaurally, for example in telephone conversations, where no directional information is available.
Scientists led by Holger Schulze at the Leibniz-Institute for Neurobiology in Magdeburg, and the Universities of Ulm, Newcastle and Erlangen have now found a neuronal mechanism in the auditory system that is able to solve the task based on the analysis of the temporal fine structure of the acoustic scene. Different speakers have different temporal fine structure in their voiced speech and that such signals are represented in different areas of the auditory cortex according to this different time structure. more...

The Research:
Read the research behind this story in the journal PLoS One.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Colorado Matters this week on KCFR has a piece on a new Center for Audio/video Forensics at UCD. "The center is the brainchild of Professor Rich Sanders, who teaches music and regularly does audio forensics for the courts." See Monday March 10 at http://www.kcfr.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=94.