The ability to differentiate tones.
A dimension of auditory sensation varying with cycles per second of the sound stimulus.
Sound that expresses emotion through rhythm, melody, and harmony.
The science pertaining to the interrelationship of psychologic phenomena and the individual's response to the physical properties of sound.
Use of sound to elicit a response in the nervous system.
The audibility limit of discriminating sound intensity and pitch.
Differential response to different stimuli.
Learning that is manifested in the ability to respond differentially to various stimuli.
A preconceived judgment made without factual basis.
Group behavior toward others by virtue of their group membership.

Midbrain combinatorial code for temporal and spectral information in concurrent acoustic signals. (1/300)

All vocal species, including humans, often encounter simultaneous (concurrent) vocal signals from conspecifics. To segregate concurrent signals, the auditory system must extract information regarding the individual signals from their summed waveforms. During the breeding season, nesting male midshipman fish (Porichthys notatus) congregate in localized regions of the intertidal zone and produce long-duration (>1 min), multi-harmonic signals ("hums") during courtship of females. The hums of neighboring males often overlap, resulting in acoustic beats with amplitude and phase modulations at the difference frequencies (dFs) between their fundamental frequencies (F0s) and harmonic components. Behavioral studies also show that midshipman can localize a single hum-like tone when presented with a choice between two concurrent tones that originate from separate speakers. A previous study of the neural mechanisms underlying the segregation of concurrent signals demonstrated that midbrain neurons temporally encode a beat's dF through spike synchronization; however, spectral information about at least one of the beat's components is also required for signal segregation. Here we examine the encoding of spectral differences in beat signals by midbrain neurons. The results show that, although the spike rate responses of many neurons are sensitive to the spectral composition of a beat, virtually all midbrain units can encode information about differences in the spectral composition of beat stimuli via their interspike intervals (ISIs) with an equal distribution of ISI spectral sensitivity across the behaviorally relevant dFs. Together, temporal encoding in the midbrain of dF information through spike synchronization and of spectral information through ISI could permit the segregation of concurrent vocal signals.  (+info)

Is integer arithmetic fundamental to mental processing?: the mind's secret arithmetic. (2/300)

Unlike the ability to acquire our native language, we struggle to learn multiplication and division. It may then come as a surprise that the mental machinery for performing lightning-fast integer arithmetic calculations could be within us all even though it cannot be readily accessed, nor do we have any idea of its primary function. We are led to this provocative hypothesis by analysing the extraordinary skills of autistic savants. In our view such individuals have privileged access to lower levels of information not normally available through introspection.  (+info)

Responses of cochlear nucleus units in the chinchilla to iterated rippled noises: analysis of neural autocorrelograms. (3/300)

Temporal encoding of stimulus features related to the pitch of iterated rippled noises was studied for single units in the chinchilla cochlear nucleus. Unlike other periodic complex sounds that produce pitch, iterated rippled noises have neither periodic waveforms nor highly modulated envelopes. Infinitely iterated rippled noise (IIRN) is generated when wideband noise (WBN) is delayed (tau), attenuated, and then added to (+) or subtracted from (-) the undelayed WBN through positive feedback. The pitch of IIRN[+, tau, -1 dB] is at 1/tau, whereas the pitch of IIRN[-, tau, -1 dB] is at 1/2tau. Temporal responses of cochlear nucleus units were measured using neural autocorrelograms. Synchronous responses as shown by peaks in neural autocorrelograms that occur at time lags corresponding to the IIRN tau can be observed for both primarylike and chopper unit types. Comparison of the neural autocorrelograms in response to IIRN[+, tau, -1 dB] and IIRN[-, tau, -1 dB] indicates that the temporal discharge of primarylike units reflects the stimulus waveform fine structure, whereas the temporal discharge patterns of chopper units reflect the stimulus envelope. The pitch of IIRN[+/-, tau, -1 dB] can be accounted for by the temporal discharge patterns of primarylike units but not by the temporal discharge of chopper units. To quantify the temporal responses, the height of the peak in the neural autocorrelogram at a given time lag was measured as normalized rate. Although it is well documented that chopper units give larger synchronous responses than primarylike units to the fundamental frequency of periodic complex stimuli, the largest normalized rates in response to IIRN[+, tau, -1 dB] were obtained for primarylike units, not chopper units. The results suggest that if temporal encoding is important in pitch processing, then primarylike units are likely to be an important cochlear nucleus subsystem that carries the pitch-related information to higher auditory centers.  (+info)

Hearing impairment induces frequency-specific adjustments in auditory spatial tuning in the optic tectum of young owls. (4/300)

Bimodal, auditory-visual neurons in the optic tectum of the barn owl are sharply tuned for sound source location. The auditory receptive fields (RFs) of these neurons are restricted in space primarily as a consequence of their tuning for interaural time differences and interaural level differences across broad ranges of frequencies. In this study, we examined the extent to which frequency-specific features of early auditory experience shape the auditory spatial tuning of these neurons. We manipulated auditory experience by implanting in one ear canal an acoustic filtering device that altered the timing and level of sound reaching the eardrum in a frequency-dependent fashion. We assessed the auditory spatial tuning at individual tectal sites in normal owls and in owls raised with the filtering device. At each site, we measured a family of auditory RFs using broadband sound and narrowband sounds with different center frequencies both with and without the device in place. In normal owls, the narrowband RFs for a given site all included a common region of space that corresponded with the broadband RF and aligned with the site's visual RF. Acute insertion of the filtering device in normal owls shifted the locations of the narrowband RFs away from the visual RF, the magnitude and direction of the shifts depending on the frequency of the stimulus. In contrast, in owls that were raised wearing the device, narrowband and broadband RFs were aligned with visual RFs so long as the device was in the ear but not after it was removed, indicating that auditory spatial tuning had been adaptively altered by experience with the device. The frequency tuning of tectal neurons in device-reared owls was also altered from normal. The results demonstrate that experience during development adaptively modifies the representation of auditory space in the barn owl's optic tectum in a frequency-dependent manner.  (+info)

Facilitatory and inhibitory frequency tuning of combination-sensitive neurons in the primary auditory cortex of mustached bats. (5/300)

Mustached bats, Pteronotus parnellii parnellii, emit echolocation pulses that consist of four harmonics with a fundamental consisting of a constant frequency (CF(1-4)) component followed by a short, frequency-modulated (FM(1-4)) component. During flight, the pulse fundamental frequency is systematically lowered by an amount proportional to the velocity of the bat relative to the background so that the Doppler-shifted echo CF(2) is maintained within a narrowband centered at approximately 61 kHz. In the primary auditory cortex, there is an expanded representation of 60.6- to 63. 0-kHz frequencies in the "Doppler-shifted CF processing" (DSCF) area where neurons show sharp, level-tolerant frequency tuning. More than 80% of DSCF neurons are facilitated by specific frequency combinations of approximately 25 kHz (BF(low)) and approximately 61 kHz (BF(high)). To examine the role of these neurons for fine frequency discrimination during echolocation, we measured the basic response parameters for facilitation to synthesized echolocation signals varied in frequency, intensity, and in their temporal structure. Excitatory response areas were determined by presenting single CF tones, facilitative curves were obtained by presenting paired CF tones. All neurons showing facilitation exhibit at least two facilitative response areas, one of broad spectral tuning to frequencies centered at BF(low) corresponding to a frequency in the lower half of the echolocation pulse FM(1) sweep and another of sharp tuning to frequencies centered at BF(high) corresponding to the CF(2) in the echo. Facilitative response areas for BF(high) are broadened by approximately 0.38 kHz at both the best amplitude and 50 dB above threshold response and show lower thresholds compared with the single-tone excitatory BF(high) response areas. An increase in the sensitivity of DSCF neurons would lead to target detection from farther away and/or for smaller targets than previously estimated on the basis of single-tone responses to BF(high). About 15% of DSCF neurons show oblique excitatory and facilitatory response areas at BF(high) so that the center frequency of the frequency-response function at any amplitude decreases with increasing stimulus amplitudes. DSCF neurons also have inhibitory response areas that either skirt or overlap both the excitatory and facilitatory response areas for BF(high) and sometimes for BF(low). Inhibition by a broad range of frequencies contributes to the observed sharpness of frequency tuning in these neurons. Recordings from orthogonal penetrations show that the best frequencies for facilitation as well as excitation do not change within a cortical column. There does not appear to be any systematic representation of facilitation ratios across the cortical surface of the DSCF area.  (+info)

Temporal encoding of the voice onset time phonetic parameter by field potentials recorded directly from human auditory cortex. (6/300)

Voice onset time (VOT) is an important parameter of speech that denotes the time interval between consonant onset and the onset of low-frequency periodicity generated by rhythmic vocal cord vibration. Voiced stop consonants (/b/, /g/, and /d/) in syllable initial position are characterized by short VOTs, whereas unvoiced stop consonants (/p/, /k/, and t/) contain prolonged VOTs. As the VOT is increased in incremental steps, perception rapidly changes from a voiced stop consonant to an unvoiced consonant at an interval of 20-40 ms. This abrupt change in consonant identification is an example of categorical speech perception and is a central feature of phonetic discrimination. This study tested the hypothesis that VOT is represented within auditory cortex by transient responses time-locked to consonant and voicing onset. Auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) elicited by stop consonant-vowel (CV) syllables were recorded directly from Heschl's gyrus, the planum temporale, and the superior temporal gyrus in three patients undergoing evaluation for surgical remediation of medically intractable epilepsy. Voiced CV syllables elicited a triphasic sequence of field potentials within Heschl's gyrus. AEPs evoked by unvoiced CV syllables contained additional response components time-locked to voicing onset. Syllables with a VOT of 40, 60, or 80 ms evoked components time-locked to consonant release and voicing onset. In contrast, the syllable with a VOT of 20 ms evoked a markedly diminished response to voicing onset and elicited an AEP very similar in morphology to that evoked by the syllable with a 0-ms VOT. Similar response features were observed in the AEPs evoked by click trains. In this case, there was a marked decrease in amplitude of the transient response to the second click in trains with interpulse intervals of 20-25 ms. Speech-evoked AEPs recorded from the posterior superior temporal gyrus lateral to Heschl's gyrus displayed comparable response features, whereas field potentials recorded from three locations in the planum temporale did not contain components time-locked to voicing onset. This study demonstrates that VOT at least partially is represented in primary and specific secondary auditory cortical fields by synchronized activity time-locked to consonant release and voicing onset. Furthermore, AEPs exhibit features that may facilitate categorical perception of stop consonants, and these response patterns appear to be based on temporal processing limitations within auditory cortex. Demonstrations of similar speech-evoked response patterns in animals support a role for these experimental models in clarifying selected features of speech encoding.  (+info)

Organization of inhibitory frequency receptive fields in cat primary auditory cortex. (7/300)

Based on properties of excitatory frequency (spectral) receptive fields (esRFs), previous studies have indicated that cat primary auditory cortex (A1) is composed of functionally distinct dorsal and ventral subdivisions. Dorsal A1 (A1d) has been suggested to be involved in analyzing complex spectral patterns, whereas ventral A1 (A1v) appears better suited for analyzing narrowband sounds. However, these studies were based on single-tone stimuli and did not consider how neuronal responses to tones are modulated when the tones are part of a more complex acoustic environment. In the visual and peripheral auditory systems, stimulus components outside of the esRF can exert strong modulatory effects on responses. We investigated the organization of inhibitory frequency regions outside of the pure-tone esRF in single neurons in cat A1. We found a high incidence of inhibitory response areas (in 95% of sampled neurons) and a wide variety in the structure of inhibitory bands ranging from a single band to more than four distinct inhibitory regions. Unlike the auditory nerve where most fibers possess two surrounding "lateral" suppression bands, only 38% of A1 cells had this simple structure. The word lateral is defined in this sense to be inhibition or suppression that extends beyond the low- and high-frequency borders of the esRF. Regional differences in the distribution of inhibitory RF structure across A1 were evident. In A1d, only 16% of the cells had simple two-banded lateral RF organization, whereas 50% of A1v cells had this organization. This nonhomogeneous topographic distribution of inhibitory properties is consistent with the hypothesis that A1 is composed of at least two functionally distinct subdivisions that may be part of different auditory cortical processing streams.  (+info)

Frequency organization and responses to complex sounds in the medial geniculate body of the mustached bat. (8/300)

The auditory cortex of the mustached bat (Pteronotus parnellii) displays some of the most highly developed physiological and organizational features described in mammalian auditory cortex. This study examines response properties and organization in the medial geniculate body (MGB) that may contribute to these features of auditory cortex. About 25% of 427 auditory responses had simple frequency tuning with single excitatory tuning curves. The remainder displayed more complex frequency tuning using two-tone or noise stimuli. Most of these were combination-sensitive, responsive to combinations of different frequency bands within sonar or social vocalizations. They included FM-FM neurons, responsive to different harmonic elements of the frequency modulated (FM) sweep in the sonar signal, and H1-CF neurons, responsive to combinations of the bat's first sonar harmonic (H1) and a higher harmonic of the constant frequency (CF) sonar signal. Most combination-sensitive neurons (86%) showed facilitatory interactions. Neurons tuned to frequencies outside the biosonar range also displayed combination-sensitive responses, perhaps related to analyses of social vocalizations. Complex spectral responses were distributed throughout dorsal and ventral divisions of the MGB, forming a major feature of this bat's analysis of complex sounds. The auditory sector of the thalamic reticular nucleus also was dominated by complex spectral responses to sounds. The ventral division was organized tonotopically, based on best frequencies of singly tuned neurons and higher best frequencies of combination-sensitive neurons. Best frequencies were lowest ventrolaterally, increasing dorsally and then ventromedially. However, representations of frequencies associated with higher harmonics of the FM sonar signal were reduced greatly. Frequency organization in the dorsal division was not tonotopic; within the middle one-third of MGB, combination-sensitive responses to second and third harmonic CF sonar signals (60-63 and 90-94 kHz) occurred in adjacent regions. In the rostral one-third, combination-sensitive responses to second, third, and fourth harmonic FM frequency bands predominated. These FM-FM neurons, thought to be selective for delay between an emitted pulse and echo, showed some organization of delay selectivity. The organization of frequency sensitivity in the MGB suggests a major rewiring of the output of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus, by which collicular neurons tuned to the bat's FM sonar signals mostly project to the dorsal, not the ventral, division. Because physiological differences between collicular and MGB neurons are minor, a major role of the tecto-thalamic projection in the mustached bat may be the reorganization of responses to provide for cortical representations of sonar target features.  (+info)

Pitch discrimination, in the context of audiology and neuroscience, refers to the ability to perceive and identify the difference in pitch between two or more sounds. It is the measure of how accurately an individual can distinguish between different frequencies or tones. This ability is crucial for various aspects of hearing, such as understanding speech, appreciating music, and localizing sound sources.

Pitch discrimination is typically measured using psychoacoustic tests, where a listener is presented with two sequential tones and asked to determine whether the second tone is higher or lower in pitch than the first one. The smallest detectable difference between the frequencies of these two tones is referred to as the "just noticeable difference" (JND) or the "difference limen." This value can be used to quantify an individual's pitch discrimination abilities and may vary depending on factors such as frequency, intensity, and age.

Deficits in pitch discrimination can have significant consequences for various aspects of daily life, including communication difficulties and reduced enjoyment of music. These deficits can result from damage to the auditory system due to factors like noise exposure, aging, or certain medical conditions, such as hearing loss or neurological disorders.

Pitch perception is the ability to identify and discriminate different frequencies or musical notes. It is the way our auditory system interprets and organizes sounds based on their highness or lowness, which is determined by the frequency of the sound waves. A higher pitch corresponds to a higher frequency, while a lower pitch corresponds to a lower frequency. Pitch perception is an important aspect of hearing and is crucial for understanding speech, enjoying music, and localizing sounds in our environment. It involves complex processing in the inner ear and auditory nervous system.

I'm sorry for any confusion, but "music" is not a term that has a medical definition. Music is a form of art that uses sound organized in time. It may include elements such as melody, harmony, rhythm, and dynamics. While music can have various psychological and physiological effects on individuals, it is not considered a medical term with a specific diagnosis or treatment application. If you have any questions related to medicine or health, I'd be happy to try to help answer those for you!

Psychoacoustics is a branch of psychophysics that deals with the study of the psychological and physiological responses to sound. It involves understanding how people perceive, interpret, and react to different sounds, including speech, music, and environmental noises. This field combines knowledge from various areas such as psychology, acoustics, physics, and engineering to investigate the relationship between physical sound characteristics and human perception. Research in psychoacoustics has applications in fields like hearing aid design, noise control, music perception, and communication systems.

Acoustic stimulation refers to the use of sound waves or vibrations to elicit a response in an individual, typically for the purpose of assessing or treating hearing, balance, or neurological disorders. In a medical context, acoustic stimulation may involve presenting pure tones, speech sounds, or other types of auditory signals through headphones, speakers, or specialized devices such as bone conduction transducers.

The response to acoustic stimulation can be measured using various techniques, including electrophysiological tests like auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) or otoacoustic emissions (OAEs), behavioral observations, or functional imaging methods like fMRI. Acoustic stimulation is also used in therapeutic settings, such as auditory training programs for hearing impairment or vestibular rehabilitation for balance disorders.

It's important to note that acoustic stimulation should be administered under the guidance of a qualified healthcare professional to ensure safety and effectiveness.

The auditory threshold is the minimum sound intensity or loudness level that a person can detect 50% of the time, for a given tone frequency. It is typically measured in decibels (dB) and represents the quietest sound that a person can hear. The auditory threshold can be affected by various factors such as age, exposure to noise, and certain medical conditions. Hearing tests, such as pure-tone audiometry, are used to measure an individual's auditory thresholds for different frequencies.

Discrimination learning is a type of learning in which an individual learns to distinguish between two or more stimuli and respond differently to each. It involves the ability to recognize the differences between similar stimuli and to respond appropriately based on the specific characteristics of each stimulus. This type of learning is important for many aspects of cognition, including perception, language, and problem-solving.

In discrimination learning, an individual may be presented with two or more stimuli and reinforced for responding differently to each. For example, a person might be trained to press a button in response to the color red and to do nothing in response to the color green. Through this process of differential reinforcement, the individual learns to discriminate between the two colors and to respond appropriately to each.

Discrimination learning is often studied in animals as well as humans, and it is thought to involve a range of cognitive processes, including attention, memory, and perception. It is an important aspect of many forms of learning and plays a role in a wide variety of behaviors.

I'm sorry for any confusion, but "prejudice" is not a term that has a medical definition in the same way that a term like "myocardial infarction" (heart attack) does. Prejudice is a psychological or sociological concept that refers to preconceived opinions or attitudes about a person or group that are not based on reason or actual experience. It often involves stereotypes and can lead to discrimination or unfair treatment. While prejudice itself is not a medical condition, it can certainly have impacts on mental and physical health, both for those who experience it and for those who hold such biases.

I'm happy to help, but I need to clarify that the term "social discrimination" is not typically used in medical definitions. However, discrimination can be a significant social determinant of health, which refers to the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work, and age that shape their health.

Discrimination can be defined as the unfair or unequal treatment of people based on certain characteristics or attributes, such as race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, age, disability, or socioeconomic status. Discrimination can occur in various settings, including employment, education, housing, healthcare, and criminal justice, among others.

Experiences of discrimination can have negative effects on physical and mental health outcomes, contributing to chronic stress, anxiety, depression, and other health conditions. Therefore, it is essential to address discrimination as a critical social determinant of health and work towards promoting equity, inclusion, and social justice in society.

Harris JD (November 1952). "Pitch discrimination". The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 24 (6): 750-5. Bibcode: ...
Guy Montrose Whipple, "Studies in pitch discrimination". American Journal of Psychology, Volume 14, pages 289-309, 1903 RF ... "A New Instrument for Measuring Pitch Discrimination". The American Journal of Psychology, Volume 48, Issue 2, 1936. Pg 335. ... G. M. Whipple, "An analytic study of the memory image and the process of judgment in the discrimination of clangs and tones". ... German psychologist William Stern invented the tone variator in 1897 to study human sensitivity to changes in pitch, going ...
Kahneman, D.; Beatty, J. (1967). "Pupillary Response in a Pitch Discrimination Task". Perception and Psychophysics. 2 (3): 101- ...
People are able to improve their discrimination of pitch; however, they cannot improve their detection. Auditory image pitch ... "Pitch-specific contributions of auditory imagery and auditory memory in vocal pitch imitation". Attention, Perception, & ... For example, they could be asked whether a probe tone matches a pitch or if they could use continuation to fill in the missing ... This was shown by having subjects compare the pitch of two words in a song. For instance, people can sing through "Jingle Bells ...
When can differences in auditory events be noticed? How big are the discrimination possibilities of the auditory system? => ... Which characteristics has the auditory event? => Determination of loudness, pitch, sound, harshness etc. How is the spatial ...
Oakes, W. F. (1955). "An experimental study of pitch naming and pitch discrimination reactions". The Journal of Genetic ... A pitch class is the set of all pitches that are a whole number of octaves apart. While the boundaries of musical pitch ... Ear training Levitin effect List of people with absolute pitch Discrimination Tonal memory Deutsch, D. (2013). "Absolute pitch ... Absolute pitch is separate from relative pitch. While the ability to name specific pitches might be used to identify intervals ...
"Octave Generalization, Pitch Discrimination, and Loudness Thresholds in the White Rat". Journal of Experimental Psychology 33: ... The conceptualization of pitch as having two dimensions, pitch height (absolute frequency) and pitch class (relative position ... Unit for measuring ratios on a logarithmic scale Eight-foot pitch - Standard pitch designation Octave band - Base 2 ... Thus all C♯s (or all 1s, if C = 0), any number of octaves apart, are part of the same pitch class. Octave equivalence is a part ...
Gaudrain, Etienne; Başkent, Deniz (2018). "Discrimination of Voice Pitch and Vocal-Tract Length in Cochlear Implant Users". Ear ... Başkent, Deniz; Luckmann, Annika; Ceha, Jessy; Gaudrain, Etienne; Tamati, Terrin N. (April 2018). "The discrimination of voice ... Clarke, Jeanne; Başkent, Deniz; Gaudrain, Etienne (January 2016). "Pitch and spectral resolution: A systematic comparison of ... Tamati, Terrin N.; Janse, Esther; Başkent, Deniz (May 2018). "Perceptual Discrimination of Speaking Style Under Cochlear ...
He interpreted this result as indicating right-hemisphere dominance for pitch discrimination. An alternative explanation of the ... In another example, Sidtis (1981) found that healthy adults have a left-ear advantage on a dichotic pitch recognition ... Arciuli J, Rankine T, Monaghan P (May 2010). "Auditory discrimination of voice-onset time and its relationship with reading ... Arciuli, J.; Rankine, T.; Monaghan, P. (2010). "Auditory discrimination of voice-onset time and its relationship with reading ...
However, only endogenous spatial cues improved performance on an auditory pitch discrimination task; exogenous spatial cues had ... or equal in pitch relative to the first pitch, regardless of the two tones spatial locations. Conversely, during spatial ... It is noted that the lack of orientation effects to pitch stimuli for exogenous spatial cuing may be due to the connectivity of ... For example, during pitch comparison blocks, participants were instructed to report whether the second stimulus was higher, ...
It would not be eradicating the effects of past discrimination but perpetuating it. Nair, Shalini (18 April 2017). "BJP's OBC ... pitch: How stronger new backward classes panel will function". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on 15 April 2019 ...
It would not be eradicating the effects of past discrimination but perpetuating it. Nair, Shalini (18 April 2017). "BJP's OBC ... pitch: How stronger new backward classes panel will function". The Indian Express. Archived from the original on 15 April 2019 ...
Effects of timbre and pitch region. Music Perception, 7, 1-14. Vos, J. & van Vianen, B.G. (1984). Thresholds for discrimination ... Cognitively, the brain is often constructionist when it comes to pitch. If one removes the fundamental pitch from a harmonic ... "Absolute pitch." Psychological Bulletin, 113, 345-361. Miyazaki, K. (1989). Absolute pitch identification: ... and notes how the pitch systems varied "not only [in] the absolute pitch of each note, but also necessarily the intervals ...
"The role of resolved and unresolved harmonics in pitch perception and frequency modulation discrimination". The Journal of the ... The pitch of a pure tone could then be seen as corresponding to the difference between adjacent gaps. Modern research suggests ... Therefore, in this theory, the pitch of a pure tone is determined by the period of neuron firing patterns-either of single ... Temporal theory can help explain how we maintain this discrimination. Even when a larger group of nerve fibers are all firing, ...
"Pitch and Clubhouse". Barford Tigers Hockey Club. Retrieved 29 September 2022. "In Birmingham, a hockey club comprising Indian ... Pakistani and Kenyan origin players fights discrimination". The Indian Express. Retrieved 29 September 2022. "Teams". Barford ...
Kenneth Phillips included Feierabend's work in his study, "The Relationship of Singing Accuracy to Pitch Discrimination and ... Phillips, Kenneth; Aitchison, Randall (1997). "The Relationship of Singing Accuracy to Pitch Discrimination and Tonal Aptitude ... In this study, Feierabend investigated the outcomes of singing and aural discrimination. Four groups of children were taught ... After analysis, evidence showed that singing and aural discrimination abilities become more similar in students who echo ...
We can hear many more different tones than there are hair cells in the cochlea; pitch discrimination, without which a violin ...
Moore BC, Peters RW (May 1992). "Pitch discrimination and phase sensitivity in young and elderly subjects and its relationship ... Voice pitch or musical pitch information, conveyed primarily via weak periodicity cues in the ENVp, results in a pitch ... Binaural pitch: these tests evaluate the ability to detect and discriminate binaural pitch, and melody recognition using ... These capacities include discrimination of frequency, discrimination of the fundamental frequency of harmonic sounds, detection ...
Results reference a discrimination threshold beyond which interpretations of pitch change become doubtful (about 2100 Hz). ... Once a lower or higher pitch was heard, the dolphins touched an oar intended as an indicator of each pitch category. ... Subject were acclimated to an unaltered sound clip, then were expected to use their memory to determine a change in pitch. ... Morgan's canon possibly presumes that their displays are genetically hardwired and show no evidence of discrimination between ...
For example, intensity, modality, duration, stimulus rate, probability, stimulus relevance, and pitch discrimination can affect ...
Aikman, Amos (3 March 2020). "Senator Sam McMahon makes nuclear pitch to build powerhouse in the north". Roberts, Lauren (4 ... "COVID-19 Vaccination Status (Prevention of Discrimination) Bill 2021". "Scott Morrison faces Senate revolt over Pauline Hanson ... Prevention of Discrimination) Bill 2021. McMahon lives on a farm outside Katherine and is an avid water skier and horse rider. ...
He was said to be a "very versatile player as he could catch, pitch, and play all infield positions". In 1934, Chase was ... The All-Stars regularly had to endure overt racial discrimination on and off the field. In the deciding game of the 1934 ... While part of the London Majors, he helped bring them to victory by pitching the Canadian Sandlot Congress championship in 1944 ... Teammates made similar statements, suggesting that "Chase should have been a big league pitcher." Chase's pitches ranged from ...
The pixel pitch remains the same (55 µm) as well as the pixel array size (256x256). It has better energy resolution through ... The Medipix device also contains an upper discrimination level and hence only signals within a range of amplitude could be ... Medipix-2 is the successor of Medipix-1. The pixel pitch was reduced to 55 µm and the pixel array is of 256x256 pixels. Each ... It had 64x64 pixels of 170 µm pitch. Pixels contained one comparator (threshold) with 3-bit per-pixel offset adjustment. The ...
"Ceremonial first pitches, umpires for historic Cuba game announced". MLB.com. March 20, 2016. "Who is Angel Hernandez? Umpire ... Perez, A.J. (July 6, 2017). "Umpire Angel Hernandez, who's suing MLB for alleged discrimination, to work All-Star Game". USA ... On April 8, 2019, Boston University published a study on 11 seasons of Major League Baseball data, almost 4 million pitches ... In July 2017, Hernández filed a federal lawsuit against MLB, alleging that racial discrimination led to his being overlooked ...
The Chinese pitch test was a 30-item test of auditory discrimination in which the student must distinguish Chinese tones. ... pitch discrimination, order of language study and bilingualism, study habits, motivation and attitudes, and personality factors ... Pimsleur gave students in his study a sound-symbol test and a Chinese pitch test. In the sound-symbol association test the ... Part 5 is a sound discrimination test involving a tonal language. No translation is needed. One only has to understand the ...
The club is composed mostly of Chin players, who claimed to have faced ethnic prejudice and discrimination on the pitch. ...
The Chatham Coloured All-Stars faced discrimination both on and off field for being a Black team in a white league. Shaugnosh's ... Newspaper reports often expressed admiration for the skills of Shaugnosh's pitching. In August 1950, Shaugnosh married Velma ...
Students learned accurate pitch discrimination through daily sight-singing drills where numbers corresponded to the sung ... Separation of musical elements, principally rhythm and pitch, and graduated exercises were key ingredients Ward inherited from ...
Studies have shown that congenital amusia is a deficit in fine-grained pitch discrimination and that 4% of the population has ... The hallmark of congenital amusia is a deficit in fine-grained pitch discrimination, and this deficit is most apparent when ... A lack of fine-grained pitch discrimination makes it extremely difficult for amusics to enjoy and appreciate music, which ... In conclusion, Monica's learning disability arose from a basic problem in pitch discrimination, which is viewed as the origin ...
He actively pitched in to help all with no discrimination and demonstrated a very democratic style of leadership. Did the lead ...

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