by WilliamM.Hartmann (Author)
Designed to follow an introductory text on psychoacoustics, this book takes readers through the mathematics of signal processing from its beginnings in the Fourier transform to advanced topics in modulation, dispersion relations, minimum phase systems, sampled data, and nonlinear distortion. While organised like an introductory engineering text on signals, the examples and exercises come from research on the perception of sound. A unique feature of this book is its consistent application of the Fourier transform, which unifies topics as diverse as cochlear filtering and digital recording. More than 250 exercises are included, many of them devoted to practical research in perception, while others explore surprising auditory illusions generated by special signals. Periodic signals, aperiodic signals, and noise -- along with their linear and nonlinear transformations -- are covered in detail. More advanced mathematical topics are treated in the appendices. A working knowledge of elementary calculus is the only prerequisite. Indispensable for researchers and advanced students in the psychology of auditory perception.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 668
Edition: 1st ed. 1998. Corr. 5th printing
Publisher: American Inst. of Physics
Published: 09 Jan 1997
ISBN 10: 1563962837
ISBN 13: 9781563962837
From the reviews
...of great importance to the hearing science community... If I were to give an advanced course, this is precisely the book I would recommend. W. Dixon Ward, University of Minnesota
Covers a wide range of topics in a clear, authoritative and easy-to-read style... [It] is intended to be used as a text for a second course in psychoacoustics ... Should be considered by anyone wanting to teach signal theory to students with an interest in psychoacoustics. Physics Today
...The book makes very clear the extraordinary complexity of the signal processing performed automatically and effortlessly by the ears ... [This book] is specifically aimed at readers deeply interested in the perception of sound. It emphasizes not only advanced psychoacoustic concepts and measurement protocols, but also provides masterly treatment of the mathematics of signals ... It is remarkably successful in its simultaneous exposition of the analytical, physical and perceptual aspects of sound and hearing ... This is a splendid book, well organized, copiously illustrated and pleasantly written. American Scientist
Signals, Sound, and Sensation is of great importance to the hearing science community... If I were to give an advanced course, this is precisely the book I would recommend. --- W. Dixon Ward, University of Minnesota