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. 1991 Nov;17(4):986-96.
doi: 10.1037//0096-1523.17.4.986.

Slippery context effect and critical bands

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Slippery context effect and critical bands

L E Marks et al. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform. 1991 Nov.

Abstract

This article explored the slippery context effect: When Ss judge the loudness of tones that differ in sound frequency as well as intensity, stimulus context (relative intensity levels at the 2 frequencies) can strongly influence the levels that are judged equally loud. It is shown that the size of the slippery context effect depends on the frequency difference between the tones: Small frequency differences (less than a critical bandwidth) produced essentially no slippery effect; much larger differences produced substantial effects. These results are consistent with a model postulating the existence of a central attentional or preattentive "filter-like" process whose weighting coefficients represent the size of the absolute as opposed to the relative (contextual) component of loudness perception and judgment.

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