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Bregman, A. S., & Campbell, J. (1971). Primary auditory stream segregation and perception of order in rapid sequences of tones. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 89(2), 244–249. 
Added by: Mark Grimshaw (28 Sep 2005 08:26:09 UTC)
Resource type: Journal Article
BibTeX citation key: Bregman1971
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Categories: General
Keywords: Perception
Creators: Bregman, Campbell
Collection: Journal of Experimental Psychology
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Attachments    
Abstract     
"A recent finding of the inability of listeners to judge the order of three or four nonspeech sounds presented in a repetitive cycle is explained by the concept of stream segregation. Two experiments showed that at high presentation rates of a short cycle of six tones (three high and three low), Ss invariably segregated the tone sequences into streams based on frequency and could perceive only those patterns relating elements of the same subjective stream."
Added by: Mark Grimshaw  
Notes     
An attempt to explain hocketus phenomena by auditory streaming.
Added by: Mark Grimshaw  
Quotes   
p.249   "The distinction between a [auditory] stream and a sensory channel is that a stream is an organizational entity and is not definable by any single physical property."   Added by: Mark Grimshaw
Keywords:   Perception
wikindx 4.2.1 ©2013 | Total resources: 973 | Database queries: 55 | Script execution: 0.29143 secs | Style: American Psychological Association (APA) | Bibliography: WIKINDX Master Bibliography