About this Research Topic
Loudness has been mainly described for stationary sounds, and we know quite well how it varies with level, frequency, bandwidth, and duration. More recently, research has been conducted on the loudness of non-stationary sounds, the loudness of sounds that differ at the two ears, and the effect of context on loudness. This research has made it possible to develop computational models of loudness.
Sound intensity is probably partly coded by the rate of neural discharges in the auditory nerve, but it is not clear where and how in the auditory pathway loudness is coded. Only recently have researchers started to investigate the coding of loudness across the whole auditory pathway.
The aim of this Research Topic is to better understand the mechanisms underlying the formation of the percept of loudness by bringing together work on psychoacoustics and neuroscience, and the integration of the two. The topics covered include: the temporal integration of loudness, across-frequency integration of loudness, binaural loudness, loudness of multiple sources, masked loudness, cognitive influences on loudness, and multimodal interactions. All contributions focusing on psychoacoustics, physiology, and imaging, using both humans and animals, and articles dealing with clinical aspects or applications to industrial problems are welcome for this article collection.
Keywords: loudness, hearing, psychoacoustics, auditory neuroscience, auditory perception
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