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Multistable auditory perception : ウィキペディア英語版 | Multistable auditory perception
Multistable auditory perception is a thoroughly investigated cognitive phenomena in which certain auditory stimuli can be perceived in multiple ways. While it has been most commonly studied in the visual domain, this phenomenon also has been observed in the auditory and olfactory modalities. In the olfactory domain, different scents are piped to the two nostrils, while in the auditory domain, researchers often examine the effects of binaural sequences of pure tones. Generally speaking, multistable perception has three main characteristics: exclusivity, implying that the multiple perceptions cannot simultaneously occur; randomness, indicating that the duration of perceptual phases follows a random law, and inevitability, meaning that subjects are unable to completely block out one percept indefinitely. == History of Multistable Auditory Perception ==
While binocular rivalry has been studied since the 16th century, multistable auditory perception is relatively new.〔Blake, R. (2001). A Primer on Binocular Rivalry, Including Current Controversies. Brain and Mind, 2, 5-38〕 Diana Deutsch was the first to discover multistability in human auditory perception, in the form of auditory illusions involving periodically oscillating tones.〔Deutsch, D. (1974). An auditory illusion. Nature, 251, 307-309〕
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