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Headphone screening to facilitate web-based auditory experiments

Author(s)
Woods, Kevin Jing Poh; Siegel, Max Harmon; Traer, James A; McDermott, Joshua H.
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Abstract
Psychophysical experiments conducted remotely over the internet permit data collection from large numbers of participants but sacrifice control over sound presentation and therefore are not widely employed in hearing research. To help standardize online sound presentation, we introduce a brief psychophysical test for determining whether online experiment participants are wearing headphones. Listeners judge which of three pure tones is quietest, with one of the tones presented 180° out of phase across the stereo channels. This task is intended to be easy over headphones but difficult over loudspeakers due to phase-cancellation. We validated the test in the lab by testing listeners known to be wearing headphones or listening over loudspeakers. The screening test was effective and efficient, discriminating between the two modes of listening with a small number of trials. When run online, a bimodal distribution of scores was obtained, suggesting that some participants performed the task over loudspeakers despite instructions to use headphones. The ability to detect and screen out these participants mitigates concerns over sound quality for online experiments, a first step toward opening auditory perceptual research to the possibilities afforded by crowdsourcing. Keywords: Psychometrics/testing, Stimulus control, Audition
Date issued
2017-07
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/116901
Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
Journal
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Publisher
Springer US
Citation
Woods, Kevin J. P., et al. “Headphone Screening to Facilitate Web-Based Auditory Experiments.” Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, vol. 79, no. 7, Oct. 2017, pp. 2064–72.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1943-3921
1943-393X

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