The "cocktail party problem" requires us to discern individual sound sources from mixtures of sources. The brain must use knowledge of natural sound regularities for this purpose. One much-discussed regularity is the tendency for frequencies to be harmonically related (integer multiples of a fundamental frequency). To test the role of harmonicity in real-world sound segregation, we developed speech analysis/synthesis tools to perturb the carrier frequencies of speech, disrupting harmonic frequency relations while maintaining the spectrotemporal envelope that determines phonemic content. We find that violations of harmonicity cause individual frequencies of speech to segregate from each other, impair the intelligibility of concurrent utteran...
Abstract: Our hearing system works roughly like a calculator for Fourier series, decomposing a sound...
The cocktail party problem requires listeners to infer individual sound sources from mixtures of sou...
# The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract How do...
The ‘cocktail party problem’ is the task of attending to a source of interest, usually speech, in a ...
This was the talk I gave for the paper I did with Josh McDermott and Hideki Kawahara on using the ST...
Abstract Hearing in noise is a core problem in audition, and a challenge for hearing-...
Four experiments sought evidence that listeners can use coherent changes in the frequency or amplitu...
Audio signal source separation is an interesting task performed by humans. In this paper, we present...
The cocktail party effect describes the human ability to detect a specific sound of interest in a no...
This paper reports the preliminary results of experiments on listening to several sounds at once. ‘I...
We investigate the cocktail party problem through an ambiguous auditory stimulus in which the listen...
Speech recognition in a complex masker usually benefits from masker harmonicity, but there are sever...
This study examines two important factors for the conception Auditory Streaming defined by Bregman, ...
It is known that the auditory system uses harmonicity cues to separate concurrent voiced sounds that...
SummaryA recent study has demonstrated how the focus of auditory attention can rapidly shift to foll...
Abstract: Our hearing system works roughly like a calculator for Fourier series, decomposing a sound...
The cocktail party problem requires listeners to infer individual sound sources from mixtures of sou...
# The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract How do...
The ‘cocktail party problem’ is the task of attending to a source of interest, usually speech, in a ...
This was the talk I gave for the paper I did with Josh McDermott and Hideki Kawahara on using the ST...
Abstract Hearing in noise is a core problem in audition, and a challenge for hearing-...
Four experiments sought evidence that listeners can use coherent changes in the frequency or amplitu...
Audio signal source separation is an interesting task performed by humans. In this paper, we present...
The cocktail party effect describes the human ability to detect a specific sound of interest in a no...
This paper reports the preliminary results of experiments on listening to several sounds at once. ‘I...
We investigate the cocktail party problem through an ambiguous auditory stimulus in which the listen...
Speech recognition in a complex masker usually benefits from masker harmonicity, but there are sever...
This study examines two important factors for the conception Auditory Streaming defined by Bregman, ...
It is known that the auditory system uses harmonicity cues to separate concurrent voiced sounds that...
SummaryA recent study has demonstrated how the focus of auditory attention can rapidly shift to foll...
Abstract: Our hearing system works roughly like a calculator for Fourier series, decomposing a sound...
The cocktail party problem requires listeners to infer individual sound sources from mixtures of sou...
# The Author(s) 2015. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract How do...