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  • Book
    Brian C J Moore.
    Contents:
    Ch. 1. Processing of sound in the auditory system and neural representation of temporal fine structure. 1.1. Introduction and overview. 1.2. The representation of signals in terms of ENV and TFS. 1.3. Analysis of sound in the cochlea. 1.4. The hair cells and transduction in the cochlea. 1.5. Responses of single neurons in the auditory nerve. 1.6. Effects of hearing loss on the processing of sounds. 1.7. Possible ways in which hearing loss and ageing might affect the neural coding of TFS
    ch. 2. The role of TFS in masking. 2.1. Introduction. 2.2. Detection cues in masking. 2.3. The detection of signals in fluctuating maskers. 2.4. The role of TFS in the ability to hear out partials in complex sounds. 2.5. The role of TFS in masking for hearing-impaired listeners. 2.6. Conclusions
    ch. 3. The role of TFS in pitch perception. 3.1. Introduction. 3.2. The perception of pitch for sinusoids. 3.3. The role of TFS for perception of pitch for complex sounds. 3.4. Conclusions
    ch. 4. The role of TFS in speech perception. 4.1 Introduction. 4.2. Types of vocoder processing and their pitfalls. 4.3 The role of ENV and TFS for speech perception. 4.4. Conclusions
    ch. 5. The influence of hearing loss and age on the binaural processing of TFS. 5.1. Introduction: Binaural cues for localisation and signal detection. 5.2. Effects of hearing loss and age on localisation and lateralisation. 5.3. The effects of hearing loss and age on the perception of binaural pitches. 5.4. The Effects of Hearing Loss and Age on MLDs. 5.5. Impact of impaired binaural TFS processing on spatial hearing for speech. 5.6. Conclusions
    ch. 6. Overview, conclusions and practical implications. 6.1. Overview of chapters 1-5. 6.2. Relevance of impaired TFS processing for hearing aids. 6.3. Acoustical requirements of places where hearing-impaired and older people meet and dine. 6.4. The use of background sounds in broadcasting and films. 6.5. Conclusions.
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