2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10162-009-0157-z
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Loudness Perception in the Domestic Cat: Reaction Time Estimates of Equal Loudness Contours and Recruitment Effects

Abstract: The domestic cat is the primary physiological model of loudness coding and recruitment. At present, there are no published descriptions of loudness perception in this species. This study used a reaction time task to characterize loudness perception in six behaviorally trained cats. The psychophysical approach was based on the assumption that sounds of equal loudness elicit responses of equal latency. The resulting equal latency contours reproduced well-known features of human equal loudness contours. At the co… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 57 publications
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“…The harbour porpoise inner ear has an acoustic fovea on the basilar membrane with high ganglion cell densities in the region where these echolocation frequencies are processed (Ketten, 1997); the relatively short RTs that were found in this study may have been the result of increased neural activity generated in the foveal region. In addition, the RTs of other mammalian species for frequencies higher than ~16 kHz reported elsewhere (Green, 1975;May et al, 2009;Kastelein et al, 2011) were also lower than expected from the equal loudness contours measured to date, suggesting that the correlation between RT and loudness is consistently weaker at these very high frequencies.…”
Section: Research Articlecontrasting
confidence: 47%
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“…The harbour porpoise inner ear has an acoustic fovea on the basilar membrane with high ganglion cell densities in the region where these echolocation frequencies are processed (Ketten, 1997); the relatively short RTs that were found in this study may have been the result of increased neural activity generated in the foveal region. In addition, the RTs of other mammalian species for frequencies higher than ~16 kHz reported elsewhere (Green, 1975;May et al, 2009;Kastelein et al, 2011) were also lower than expected from the equal loudness contours measured to date, suggesting that the correlation between RT and loudness is consistently weaker at these very high frequencies.…”
Section: Research Articlecontrasting
confidence: 47%
“…RT has therefore been used in subjects for which loudness assessment with standard methods is very difficult or impossible, such as human infants (Leibold and Werner, 2002) and non-human animals (Dooling et al, 1978;Green, 1975;Kastelein et al, 2011;May et al, 2009;Moody, 1973;Pfingst et al, 1975a;Stebbins, 1966;Ridgway et al, 2001). Functionally, the RT reflects the combined duration of the sensory, cognitive and motor processes needed to generate the response (Sanders, 1998).…”
Section: Relationship Between Rt and Loudnessmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Data from noise-exposed cats (May et al 2009) appear roughly consistent with psychoacoustical data from humans with noise-induced hearing losses. For example, the bandwidth of vowels appears qualitatively consistent with loudness summation data from a group of humans with noise-induced hearing losses (Florentine and Zwicker 1979;Florentine et al 1980).…”
Section: Current State Of Knowledge Regarding Loudnesssupporting
confidence: 58%
“…The relationship between sound level and reaction time has been measured for nonhuman primates (Stebbins and Miller 1964;Pfingst et al 1975) and the 1 Loudness domestic cat (May et al 2009). Attempts have been made to relate equal loudness contours from humans to equal latency contours from reaction times in both species (Stebbins 1966;Pfingst et al 1975;May et al 2009).…”
Section: Current State Of Knowledge Regarding Loudnessmentioning
confidence: 99%