Delivering binaural stimuli with loudspeakers through crosstalk filters avoids the intrinsic artifacts of using headphones in localization experiments. However, one must first demonstrate that such a system is equivalent to that of a real soundfield. This study demonstrates that listeners did not perceive any meaningful difference between a real sound source at 0 degrees and a virtual rendering using crosstalk cancellation from a pair of loudspeakers at ±90 degrees. Three different stimuli were used: single bursts of wideband noise, click trains, and repeated harmonic pulses. Listeners could not discriminate between the two cases using a forced-choice paradigm.
Authors:
Moore, Alastair H.; Tew, Anthony I.; Nicol, Rozenn
Affiliations:
Audio Lab, Department of Electronics, University of York, UK; France Telecom R & D, Lannion, France(See document for exact affiliation information.)
JAES Volume 58 Issue 1/2 pp. 36-45; January 2010
Publication Date:
February 12, 2010
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