Auditory
Interactivities - $40
- A supplementary tool for
teaching hearing science
- Uses your Windows®
compatible
audio-card – no other hardware necessary
- Runs under Windows®
XP/Vista/Windows 7
- Runs on any computer using an
Intel Pentium/AMD 333MHz CPU (or higher)
- Volume
discounts are available
“Auditory
Interactivities is a valuable teaching tool that every
instructor of hearing science and psychoacoustics should
consider adding to their instructional repertoire. This
interactive approach to instruction is particularly effective
for topics in psychoacoustics, because it allows students to
experience firsthand many auditory perceptual phenomena that
could otherwise be accessed only vicariously through
descriptions in textbooks and lectures.”
Jean C.
Krause, Ear and Hearing, February 2005
Auditory Interactivities (AI) consists of a collection of
structured interactivities designed to allow users to experience
and to study auditory phenomena using Windows-compatible
personal computers. AI was designed as a supplementary tool for
teaching hearing science, and it is assumed that users have
access to appropriate texts and other reference material. The
courseware employs a high degree of interactivity in its
presentation of topics in signals, acoustics, and
psychoacoustics.
AI is appropriate for teaching undergraduate students in Speech
and Hearing Science, Audiology, Communication Disorders, and
Experimental Psychology. Graduate students in those disciplines,
as well as students of biomedical, electrical, and acoustical
engineering, will also find the material stimulating and
educational. AI can be used either by instructors for classroom
demonstrations or by students themselves for direct
experimentation.
AI contains major units on:
- Signals and Signal Transformations
- Physical Acoustics of Hearing
- Monaural Perception of Stationary Signals
- Monaural Temporal Phenomena
- Binaural Hearing
- Spatial Hearing
- Pattern Perception
Within each unit are lessons on specific topics. Many of the
lessons allow the student to set up an experiment and collect
data. Others present interactive demonstrations. Each lesson is
accompanied by a Background section providing an introduction to
the topic, and an Instructions section that describes how the
interactivity is used.
The development of AI was carried out with support from the
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication
Disorders.
AI can be used on Windows-based computers running the
Windows® 98/2000/XP/Vista operating systems.
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