Combined assessment of auditory distance perception and externalization
Henning Hoppe, Steven van de Par, Virginia Flanagin, Stephan D., Ewert

TL;DR
This study examines how visual cues, room acoustics, and headphone rendering methods influence auditory distance perception and externalization in virtual environments, revealing that room size and visual presence significantly affect perception, while rendering methods have minimal impact.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of factors affecting auditory distance perception and externalization, highlighting the distinct influences of visual cues and room acoustics in virtual audio-visual setups.
Findings
Room size significantly affects ADP and externalization.
Visual environment influences ADP but not externalization.
Movable loudspeaker improves distance estimation and externalization.
Abstract
This study investigates frontal auditory distance perception (ADP) and externalization in virtual audio-visual environments, considering effects of headphone rendering method, room size, reverberation, and visual representation of the room. Either head-related impulse responses from an artificial head or a spherical head model were used for diotic (monophonic) and binaural auralizations with and without real-time head tracking. The visuals were presented through a head-mounted display. Two differently sized rooms as well as an infinitely extending space (echoic and anechoic) were used in which an invisible frontal virtual sound source was located. Additionally, the effect of a freely movable loudspeaker for visually indicating perceived distances was investigated. Both ADP and externalization were significantly affected by room size, but otherwise the two perceptual quantities differed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHearing Loss and Rehabilitation
