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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

The early repetition effect as a marker of facial representations stored in memory and its sensitivity to changes in viewpoint

Dörr, Peggy 24 March 2008 (has links)
In Modellen der Gesichtererkennung (Bruce & Young, 1986) wird eine Verarbeitungsstufe postuliert, auf welcher strukturelle Gesichterrepraesentationen im Langzeitgedaechtnis (LZG) innerhalb von sogenannten Face Recognition Units (FRUs), abgerufen werden. Frühere Studien (z.B. Pfütze, Sommer & Schweinberger, 2002) zeigten eine Komponente in den ereigniskorrelierten Potentialen (EKPs), welche die Aktivierung solcher FRUs anzeigen - der frühe Wiederholungseffekt (oder early repetition effect). Dieser zeigt sich bei wiederholter Darbietung bekannter Gesichter um 250-350 ms mit frontaler Positivierung und temporal inferiorer Negativierung als ein EKP auf die zweite Praesentation. In Experiment I und II dieser Dissertation wurde der ERE als Marker der Aktivierung struktureller Gesichterrepraesentationen im LZG durch ein Prime-Target-Paradigma mit einer perzeptuellen Rueckwaertsmaskierung validiert. Die Maskierung mit einem unbekannten Gesicht ergab im Vergleich zu einem zerwürfelten Gesicht und der unmaskierten Bedingung eine spezifische Topographie des ERE, die den gedächtnisbasierten Anteil des ERE widerspiegelt. Dieses Paradigma wurde in Experiment III eingesetzt, um die Blickwinkelabhängigkeit des ERE zu untersuchen. Die Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, daß Gesichterdurch mehr als nur blickwinkelabhängige, zweidimensionale Abbilder repräsentiert sind, da zumindest für Frontalgesichter ein ERE sogar über eine Blickwinkelabweichung von 90 Grad gezeigt werden konnte. Dies ist vereinbar mit einer "dualen Strategie" der Gesichtererkennung (z.B. O''Toole, Edelman & Bülthoff, 1998) wobei sowohl Konfiguration als auch Einzelmerkmale eines Gesichts abgerufen werden. Die Ergebnisse sind vereinbar mit Bruce und Young (1986), welche FRUs als Einheiten konzipierten, in denen konfigurale und einzelne Merkmale verschiedener Blickwinkel miteinander verbunden sind, was in diesem Sinn einer objektzentrierten, dreidimensionalen Speicherung eines individuellen Gesichts entspricht. / Models of face recognition (Bruce & Young, 1986) postulate a processing stage where face recognition units (FRUs) are accessed. FRUs are thought to be structural representations of familiar faces stored in long-term memory (LTM). Previous work (e.g. Pfütze, Sommer & Schweinberger, 2002), suggested the existence of a component in the event-related-potential (ERP) which signals FRU activation - the early repetition effect (ERE). The ERE can be observed when familiar faces are shown repeatedly, as an ERP around 250-350 ms that is more positive at fronto-central and more negative at inferior temporal sites for the second presentation of the face. In Experiment I and II of the present dissertation the ERE was validated as a marker of FRU activation in LTM by using a repetition priming paradigm with backward masking. Compared to the scrambled and non-mask conditions, the ERE revealed a distinguishable topography when an unfamiliar face interspersed prime and target, demonstrating contributions of face identity codes to the ERE. In Experiment III, this paradigm was used to analyse the viewpoint-dependency of the ERE. Results of Experiment III indicate that facial representations are more than viewpoint-dependent, two-dimensional images of a face, because even under a 90° view deviance between prime and target an ERE was detectable at least for frontal targets. This reconciles a dual-strategy in face recognition (e.g. O’Toole, Edelman & Bülthoff, 1998). Accordingly, facial representations can be assumed as a combination of image-based views, reflecting their configuration and single features. Results are in line with Bruce and Young (1986) who postulated that FRUs contain both features and configurations of distinct head angles in an interlinked manner. In that sense, FRUs can be described as three-dimensional analogues of the face they represent making object-centered recognition on an individual level possible.
142

Mascaramento clínico: limiares auditivos pelos métodos Platô e Otimizado

Fernandes, Kelly Cristina de Souza 09 October 2007 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-27T18:12:24Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Kelly Cristina de Souza Fernandes.pdf: 272473 bytes, checksum: fd1b99ff0dcaf5e12bdb0ad1b9c2912e (MD5) Previous issue date: 2007-10-09 / INTRODUCTION: Many situations may difficult the obtaining of thresholds for each ear, separately, in pure tone audiometry, demanding the use of masking. The plateau method, developed by Hood (1960) has being the most utilized for more than four decades. Nevertheless, Turner (2004) has suggested a masking protocol with a different method, called optimized, which could replace the previous one with efficacy in specific cases. PURPOSE: To verify if there is a difference among air and bone conduction hearing thresholds, using the two clinical masking methods: plateau and optimized. METHOD: Forty individuals aged from 15 to 65 years old, with either unilateral or bilateral hearing losses, considering unilateral, bilateral, symmetrical and just bone, proposed by Turner s classification, have participated of this study. They underwent air and bone conduction pure tone audiometry for both ears, without and with the use of the two masking methods. RESULTS: There was a 6.1% difference between the results for the air conduction threshold retest and a 15.1 % for the bone conduction threshold retest, taking into consideration the symmetrical model and a 12.8% for the bone conduction retest, considering the just bone model. There was no statistically significant difference between the air and bone conduction hearing thresholds with the two masking methods, considering unilateral and bilateral models. CONCLUSION: The plateau method can be utilized for all models and the optimized one is the most efficient for unilateral and bilateral models, having no indication for the symmetrical model. Therefore, both masking methods have presented advantages and disadvantages, implying that the audiologist must have knowledge of them in order to choose correctly the masking method to be used / INTRODUÇÃO: Na realização da audiometria tonal, determinadas situações dificultam a obtenção dos limiares para cada orelha separadamente, havendo a necessidade de utilização do mascaramento. O Método Platô, desenvolvido por Hood (1960), vem sendo o mais utilizado há mais de quatro décadas. Contudo, em 2004, Turner sugeriu um protocolo de mascaramento no qual um diferente método, denominado Método Otimizado, poderia substituí-lo de forma eficaz em casos específicos. OBJETIVO: Verificar se há diferença entre os limiares auditivos obtidos, por via aérea e via óssea, utilizando-se dois métodos de mascaramento clínico: o Método Platô e o Otimizado. MÉTODO: Participaram deste estudo 40 indivíduos, com idades entre 15 e 65 anos, que apresentavam perda auditiva unilateral ou bilateral, considerando os modelos unilateral, bilateral, simétrico e somente-ósseo, propostos pela classificação de Turner (2004). Foram realizados os procedimentos de audiometria tonal liminar por via aérea e óssea, para ambas as orelhas, sem e com a utilização dos dois métodos de mascaramento. RESULTADOS: Não houve diferença estatisticamente significante entre os limiares auditivos obtidos com os dois métodos de mascaramento por via aérea e via óssea considerando-se os modelos, unilateral e bilateral. No entanto, houve diferença de 6,1% dos resultados para o re-teste dos limiares por via aérea e de 15,1% para o re-teste por via óssea, considerando o modelo simétrico e de 12,8% para o re-teste de via óssea, considerando o modelo somente-ósseo. CONCLUSÃO: O Método Platô pode ser utilizado para todos os modelos e o Otimizado é mais eficaz para os modelos unilateral e bilateral, não sendo indicado para o modelo simétrico. Diante disso, ambos os métodos de mascaramento apresentaram vantagens e desvantagens, sugerindo que o audiologista tenha conhecimento destas para que proceda a seleção do método de forma consciente
143

A ringing phone : The distracting effect of ringtones

Liljenberg, Robin January 2017 (has links)
Ringing phones are common in work space environments in the 21th century and while capturing the attention of the call-taker they also tend to disrupt people in the surrounding environment. This study aims to investigate the attentional capturing effect of ringtones by comparing sudden and increasing onsets with quiet and noise masking conditions while participants undertook a test of short-term memory for serial order (serial recall). The experiment presented new evidence that increasing ringtone sounds have a disruptive effect on serial recall processing. A masking noise background, however, successfully eliminated the effect of the increasing ringtone sound.  In contrary to what was anticipated, the ringtone with the sudden onset did not cause an attentional capture effect, suggesting at least in behavioural terms, it was successfully ignored. The results are discussed in relation to the literature on looking effects. Increasing ringtone sounds may appear looming, with sudden onset sounds decreasing in volume appearing receding. The central idea is that looming sounds are more disruptive to serial recall because they cause a diversion of attention from the serial recall task so as to react to the apparently approaching sound. The disruption attributable to looming sounds may be a form of attentional capture that is more specific than those triggered by deviant events within a to-be-ignored stream of sounds.
144

The Effect of Age, Noise Level, and Frequency on Loudness Matching Functions of Normal Hearing Listeners with Noise Masking

Parrish, Linda Titera 01 February 2016 (has links)
Loudness recruitment is an abnormally rapid growth of perceived loudness above the hearing threshold that slows to normal growth as the intensity of the signal increases. Recruitment is common in sensorineural hearing loss and in simulated hearing loss with noise masking. This study looked at possible differences in loudness recruitment with age, noise level, and frequency. Participants from two age groups were tested. Group A included participants aged 18 to 30 years and Group B included participants aged 50 to 75 years. Participants practiced the Alternate Binaural Loudness Balance (ABLB) test without noise present. They then repeated the tests with masking noise. Tests were completed with two different noise levels (50 dB SPL and 70 dB SPL), and two different test tone frequencies (1000 Hz and 2000 Hz). Participants identified loudness matching points to reference intensities of 20, 40, 60, and 80 dB HL. Participants completed 3 trials at each intensity level. Difference scores of the intensity of the loudness matching point minus the intensity of the reference tone were computed and analyzed statistically. An analysis of variance (ANOVA) for repeated measures fails to show significance for between-subjects effect for age, within subject effect for frequency, and trial. An ANOVA for repeated measures shows significant within subject effect for noise and for intensity. The 70 dB SPL noise level shows greater difference scores and a steeper loudness matching function slope than the 50 dB SPL noise level. The greater difference scores and steeper slope are expected due to the higher hearing threshold created with the higher noise level. As the intensity level increases, the difference score decreases. The decrease in difference scores with increasing intensity levels shows the presence of loudness recruitment. The results of this study suggest the use of masking noise in order to measure recruitment is an acceptable simulation. Age alone does not account for changes in loudness recruitment. Therefore, recruitment measurement with noise masking may be a potential marker of early auditory dysfunction.
145

Speech masking release in hybrid cochlear implant users: roles of spectral and temporal cues in residual acoustic hearing

Tejani, Viral Dinesh 01 December 2018 (has links)
Improved cochlear implant (CI) designs and surgical techniques have allowed CI patients to retain acoustic hearing in the implanted ear post-operatively. These EAS (electric-acoustic stimulation) CI users listen with a combination of acoustic and electric hearing in the same ear. While electric hearing alone improves speech recognition in quiet, preserved acoustic hearing allows EAS CI users to outperform traditional CI users in speech recognition in noise and demonstrate “speech masking release,” an improvement in speech recognition in temporally fluctuating noise relative to steady noise. Masking release is arguably an ecologically valid metric, as listeners often attend to target speech embedded in fluctuating competing speech. Improved speech recognition outcomes have been attributed to the spectral and temporal resolution provided by acoustic hearing. However, the relationship between spectral and temporal resolution and outcomes in EAS CI users is not clear. This study evaluated speech masking release, spectral ripple density discrimination thresholds, and fundamental frequency difference limens (f0DLs) in EAS CI users. Both the ripple and f0DL tasks are thought to measure underlying spectral resolution and temporal fine structure. EAS CI subjects underwent testing in three listening modes: acoustic-only, electric-only, and acoustic+electric. Comparisons across listening modes allowed the benefit provided by acoustic hearing to be quantified. It was hypothesized that speech masking release, spectral ripple density discrimination thresholds, and f0DLs would be poorest with electric-only hearing and would improve in the acoustic-only and acoustic+electric listening modes. This would reflect the benefit of preserved acoustic hearing. It was also hypothesized that speech masking release would correlate with spectral ripple density discrimination thresholds and f0DLs, reflecting the roles of spectral and temporal fine structure cues. Lastly, it was hypothesized that EAS CI users with more residual hearing (lower audiometric thresholds) would perform better on all three tasks. Speech masking release was evaluated using a 12-alternative-forced-choice (AFC) spondee recognition in noise task. The noise was a two-talker and a ten-talker babble presented at -5 dB SNR, and masking release was quantified as the difference in spondee recognition in two-talker babble relative to ten-talker babble. Spectral ripple density discrimination thresholds were assessed in a 3-AFC task using a broadband stimulus that contained spectral peaks and valleys logarithmically spaced on the frequency axis. The spacing between spectral peaks (ripple density) was varied to determine the threshold at which listeners could no longer resolve the individual spectral peaks. F0DLs were assessed via a 3-AFC task using a broadband harmonic complex with a baseline f0 = 110 Hz. The f0 of the test intervals was varied to determine the smallest change in f0 that the listener could detect. Results showed that performance in all three measures was poorest when EAS CI users were tested using electric-hearing only, with significant improvements when tested in the acoustic-only and acoustic+electric listening modes. F0DLs, but not spectral ripple density discrimination thresholds or audiometric thresholds, significantly correlated with speech masking release. Speech masking release also significantly correlated with open-set AzBio sentence recognition in noise scores obtained from clinical records. Results indicated that preservation of residual acoustic hearing allows for speech masking release, likely due to access to temporal fine structure cues provided by residual hearing. The significant correlation between speech masking release and sentence recognition in noise indicates that the ability to extract target speech embedded in temporally fluctuating competing speech is important for speech recognition in noise. Funded by National Institutes of Health/National Institutes on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIH/NIDCD) P50 DC000242, American Speech-Language-Hearing Foundation Student Research Grant, and American Academy of Audiology Student Investigator Research Grant.
146

Clinical Aspects of Tinnitus- Course, Cognition, PET, and the Internet

Andersson, Gerhard January 2000 (has links)
<p>The purpose of this thesis was to develop novel ways to study tinnitus, to investigate the course of tinnitus, and to study the effects of cognitive-behaviour therapy on tinnitus related distress. Data from 377 tinnitus patients were collected.</p><p>A group of 216 patients completed audiological measures and were assessed in a structured interview. The Klockhoff and Lindblom's grading system was used and its inter-rater reliability assessed in a subsample showing a high degree of correspondence. A discriminant analysis showed that a substantial proportion of patients could be correctly classified into grade II or III, by measures of pitch, minimal masking level of tinnitus, avoidance of situations because of tinnitus, and tolerance in relation to onset.</p><p>Using tests developed in cognitive psychology, it was found that tinnitus patients had impaired performance. There was no evidence for an attentional bias towards tinnitus related words using a computerized emotional Stroop task, but masking sounds of an "on-and-off" character were more disruptive than constant masking when patients performed the digit-symbol test. It is suggested that tinnitus distress may be increased by the 'changing-state' character of the tinnitus signal, or alternatively by intermittent masking sounds.</p><p>In a case-study a patient received an i.v. injection of lidocaine while Positron Emission Tomograpy was conducted. The brain activity associated with tinnitus included the left primary, secondary and integrative auditory brain areas, as well as right paralimbic areas related to negative feelings. The precuneus (Brodmann area 7) might be a brain area involved in the aversiveness associated with tinnitus.</p><p>Using a tinnitus questionnaire as the dependent measure it was found that tinnitus maskability at admission predicted distress at follow-up for an average of five years following admission. Some improvement in tinnitus occurred over time, but this was more evident in patients who had received a cognitive-behavioural treatment program.</p><p>The effect of an Internet based cognitive-behavioural self-help treatment program for tinnitus was investigated showing a high dropout rate, but with positive results in that the treated patients improved.</p>
147

Clinical Aspects of Tinnitus- Course, Cognition, PET, and the Internet

Andersson, Gerhard January 2000 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis was to develop novel ways to study tinnitus, to investigate the course of tinnitus, and to study the effects of cognitive-behaviour therapy on tinnitus related distress. Data from 377 tinnitus patients were collected. A group of 216 patients completed audiological measures and were assessed in a structured interview. The Klockhoff and Lindblom's grading system was used and its inter-rater reliability assessed in a subsample showing a high degree of correspondence. A discriminant analysis showed that a substantial proportion of patients could be correctly classified into grade II or III, by measures of pitch, minimal masking level of tinnitus, avoidance of situations because of tinnitus, and tolerance in relation to onset. Using tests developed in cognitive psychology, it was found that tinnitus patients had impaired performance. There was no evidence for an attentional bias towards tinnitus related words using a computerized emotional Stroop task, but masking sounds of an "on-and-off" character were more disruptive than constant masking when patients performed the digit-symbol test. It is suggested that tinnitus distress may be increased by the 'changing-state' character of the tinnitus signal, or alternatively by intermittent masking sounds. In a case-study a patient received an i.v. injection of lidocaine while Positron Emission Tomograpy was conducted. The brain activity associated with tinnitus included the left primary, secondary and integrative auditory brain areas, as well as right paralimbic areas related to negative feelings. The precuneus (Brodmann area 7) might be a brain area involved in the aversiveness associated with tinnitus. Using a tinnitus questionnaire as the dependent measure it was found that tinnitus maskability at admission predicted distress at follow-up for an average of five years following admission. Some improvement in tinnitus occurred over time, but this was more evident in patients who had received a cognitive-behavioural treatment program. The effect of an Internet based cognitive-behavioural self-help treatment program for tinnitus was investigated showing a high dropout rate, but with positive results in that the treated patients improved.
148

Digital Watermarking Based Image and Video Quality Evaluation

Wang, Sha 02 April 2013 (has links)
Image and video quality evaluation is very important. In applications involving signal transmission, the Reduced- or No-Reference quality metrics are generally more practical than the Full-Reference metrics. Digital watermarking based quality evaluation emerges as a potential Reduced- or No-Reference quality metric, which estimates signal quality by assessing the degradation of the embedded watermark. Since the watermark contains a small amount of information compared to the cover signal, performing accurate signal quality evaluation is a challenging task. Meanwhile, the watermarking process causes signal quality loss. To address these problems, in this thesis, a framework for image and video quality evaluation is proposed based on semi-fragile and adaptive watermarking. In this framework, adaptive watermark embedding strength is assigned by examining the signal quality degradation characteristics. The "Ideal Mapping Curve" is experimentally generated to relate watermark degradation to signal degradation so that the watermark degradation can be used to estimate the quality of distorted signals. With the proposed framework, a quantization based scheme is first implemented in DWT domain. In this scheme, the adaptive watermark embedding strengths are optimized by iteratively testing the image degradation characteristics under JPEG compression. This iterative process provides high accuracy for quality evaluation. However, it results in relatively high computational complexity. As an improvement, a tree structure based scheme is proposed to assign adaptive watermark embedding strengths by pre-estimating the signal degradation characteristics, which greatly improves the computational efficiency. The SPIHT tree structure and HVS masking are used to guide the watermark embedding, which greatly reduces the signal quality loss caused by watermark embedding. Experimental results show that the tree structure based scheme can evaluate image and video quality with high accuracy in terms of PSNR, wPSNR, JND, SSIM and VIF under JPEG compression, JPEG2000 compression, Gaussian low-pass filtering, Gaussian noise distortion, H.264 compression and packet loss related distortion.
149

Populärmusik i TV-reklam : En kvalitativ undersökning av musiken som betydelsebärande teckensystem

Ångström, Hugo January 2010 (has links)
This paper examines a popular music song (Heartbeats by Jose Gonzalez) as a sign system in television advertising. The study was conducted through qualitative questionnaires in connection to an audio-visual method of analysis called Masking. The method facilitates the analysis of isolated parts in the audio-visual spectrum by masking/hiding parts of the audio-visual totality.The survey had seven respondents where a hermeneutic epistemological approach was used. For the analysis Cooper's theory of brand identity (Practical and Symbolic Attitudes to Buying Brands) was used together with an interaction model for music in audio-visual advertising called "Modes of music-image interaction”. The results showed that the music was associated with values as genuine, honest, responsibility, purity, independence and innovation. The music's symbolic values helped to position the brand in a lifestyle context. The music also helped to express the target group’s identity and attitudes by being innovative and independent. It also enhanced the perception of the visual colour rendition in the film. In general the television advertisement perceived more positive and entertaining when the music was present. In other words the music's social and cultural position contributed to raise the film's credibility. A deeper social and cultural value was created in the movie through resonance between symbolic values of the music and symbolic values of the film.
150

Digital Watermarking Based Image and Video Quality Evaluation

Wang, Sha 02 April 2013 (has links)
Image and video quality evaluation is very important. In applications involving signal transmission, the Reduced- or No-Reference quality metrics are generally more practical than the Full-Reference metrics. Digital watermarking based quality evaluation emerges as a potential Reduced- or No-Reference quality metric, which estimates signal quality by assessing the degradation of the embedded watermark. Since the watermark contains a small amount of information compared to the cover signal, performing accurate signal quality evaluation is a challenging task. Meanwhile, the watermarking process causes signal quality loss. To address these problems, in this thesis, a framework for image and video quality evaluation is proposed based on semi-fragile and adaptive watermarking. In this framework, adaptive watermark embedding strength is assigned by examining the signal quality degradation characteristics. The "Ideal Mapping Curve" is experimentally generated to relate watermark degradation to signal degradation so that the watermark degradation can be used to estimate the quality of distorted signals. With the proposed framework, a quantization based scheme is first implemented in DWT domain. In this scheme, the adaptive watermark embedding strengths are optimized by iteratively testing the image degradation characteristics under JPEG compression. This iterative process provides high accuracy for quality evaluation. However, it results in relatively high computational complexity. As an improvement, a tree structure based scheme is proposed to assign adaptive watermark embedding strengths by pre-estimating the signal degradation characteristics, which greatly improves the computational efficiency. The SPIHT tree structure and HVS masking are used to guide the watermark embedding, which greatly reduces the signal quality loss caused by watermark embedding. Experimental results show that the tree structure based scheme can evaluate image and video quality with high accuracy in terms of PSNR, wPSNR, JND, SSIM and VIF under JPEG compression, JPEG2000 compression, Gaussian low-pass filtering, Gaussian noise distortion, H.264 compression and packet loss related distortion.

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