Multidimensional Scaling Approach to the Determination of Basic Psychological Parameters for Pure Tones

1959 ◽  
Vol 31 (11) ◽  
pp. 1578-1579
Author(s):  
Robert W. Peters
2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Budiono

Marketing represent method which used by a lot of side in development or extehsion of market compaxtnent.By defenitif Marketing is an sqcial process and manajerial making individual and group. obtaining what they require and wish, through reciprocal transfer and creation of product and value \Mith others. lndustrial engineedng of muhammadiyah malang university as an institution under shade of Private sector College that is university of muhammadiyah malang. of cours€ very pay aftention to marketing problem. because it caanot deni€d that marketing playing a part important in student improvement in amount. With data existence that is degradation tendency sum up student, of cowse required an effective marketing system to utilize the improvcment of sum up student. K_Means Cluster, Multidimensional Scaling and Cross Classified Frequency rcpresenting some of appliance of analysis used in determination of market segment of Induslrial engineering, by K_Means [is] Cluster, position of industrial engineering UMM compared to competitor with Multidimensional Scaling and also Cross Classified Frequency ( crosstab ) analysis which used in behavioral determination of Industrial engineering consumer of I-IMM. Applying frorn analysis expected to bring positive impact to marketing formulation of industrial engineering of UMM, that is marketing more emphasized at segment of certain ma.ket with paid attention to segment of analysis resul! for tlle competitor, hence the marketing more emphasized at competitor according to analyse result and for crosstab, marketing €mphasized at a consumer behavior in chosening Industrial engineering of UMM, that is by tipologi consumer behavior. so that th€re is imFovement quantitatively sum up Industrial engineering student of tMM after analysis conducted.


2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 309-321 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Schoisswohl ◽  
Johannes Arnds ◽  
Martin Schecklmann ◽  
Berthold Langguth ◽  
Winfried Schlee ◽  
...  

Background: The phenomenon of short-term tinnitus suppression by different forms of acoustic stimulation is referred to as residual inhibition (RI). RI can be triggered in the majority of tinnitus cases and was found to be depending on the used intensity, length or types of sounds. Past research already stressed the impact of noise stimulation as well as the superiority of amplitude modulated (AM) pure tones at the individual tinnitus frequency for RI in tonal tinnitus. Recently a novel approach for the determination of noise-like tinnitus characteristics was proposed. Objectives: The aim of the present study was to investigate whether in participants with noise-like tinnitus RI can be increased by AM noise stimuli according to the individual tinnitus frequency range. Methods: For this purpose the individual tinnitus characteristics (noise-like and tonal tinnitus) of 29 people affected by tinnitus (mean age = 55.59, 7 females, mean tinnitus duration = 159.97 months) were assessed via customizable noise-band matching. The objective was to generate bandpass filtered stimuli according to the individual tinnitus sound (individualized bandpass filtered [IBP] sounds). Subsequently, various stimuli differing in bandpass filtering and AM were tested with respect to their potential to induce RI. Participants were acoustically stimulated with 7 different types of stimuli for 3 min each and had to rate the loudness of their tinnitus after each stimuli. Results: Results indicate a general efficacy of noise stimuli for the temporary suppression of tinnitus, but no significant differences between AM and unmodulated IBP. Significantly better effects were observed for the subgroup with noise-like tinnitus (n = 14), especially directly after stimulation offset. Conclusions: The study at hand provides further insights in potential mechanisms behind RI for different types of tinnitus. Beyond that, derived principles may qualify for new or extend current tinnitus sound therapies.


1996 ◽  
Vol 75 (4) ◽  
pp. 1601-1618 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Rajan

1. An additivity model for the accretion of cochlear sensorineural hearing losses has been described from studies in the guinea pig cochlea. Among other aspects, the model allows determination of how residual hearing losses after an initial exposure (E1) affect hearing losses to be expected to a subsequent second exposure (E2). In the present study, the model was applied to temporary hearing losses produced in the cat cochlea by loud pure tones at a frequency from 3 to 15 kHz, affecting regions from 2 to 28 kHz. Successive identical exposures, generally with an interexposure interval of approximately equal to 35 min, were used to produce compound action potential (CAP) threshold losses. Total losses after E2 were compared with those predicted by the model. Testing was carried out under conditions where olivocochlear bundle (OCB)-mediated protection was or was not activated. (As shown elsewhere, OCB-mediated protection is activated by particular binaural exposures, but not monaural exposure, and reduces threshold losses in the binaural condition with intact OCB compared with losses in either the monaural condition, or the binaural condition where the OCB was cut before loud sound.) 2. The additivity model was a very good predictor of total losses under a variety of conditions; different exposure frequencies, monaural and binaural exposures, and with intact or cut OCB pathways. In these exposures, the model's application could be generalized so that as long as residual losses just pre-E2 were well specified in an animal, total losses could be as well predicted using normative data bases of a single exposure with the same parameters. 3. The model also allowed determination of whether OCB-mediated protection was exercised during E2 in dual identical exposures. Expression of protection for E2 depended on whether E1 elicited protection. When tested with monaural (at 7 or 15 kHz) or binaural exposures (at kHz) for which E1 did not elicit protection, neither did E2. However, when tested with a binaural E1 (at 7, 11, or 15 kHz), which activated protection, E2 also elicited protection. In the latter case, for 7- and 11-kHz exposures, the amount of E2 protection increased with total hearing loss, a relationship similar to that seen for single exposures in cat and guinea pig. For 15-kHz exposure, the amount of E2 protection was constant across test frequencies. 4. Finally, a critical observation with 11-kHz exposure was that a binaural E1 eliciting protection was able to "prime" the OCB so that protection could be elicited by a subsequent monaural E2, which, by itself as a singel exposure, does not evoke protection. This result has important implications in terms of the physiology of the protective OCB pathways and clinically in terms of the manner in which loud-sound-induced hearing loss accumulated.


1968 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristian Holt-Hansen

This paper describes a new method of quantitative determination of taste. In a special experimental situation S compares taste and pure tones. The latter are varied in pitch until S finds the pitch which characterizes the sample. The method is illustrated by results for two samples, Carlsberg Lager and Carlsberg Elephant Beer. New problems are involved within the psychology of perception.


1956 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 166-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
D W Robinson ◽  
R S Dadson
Keyword(s):  

Aviation ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 104-114
Author(s):  
Tüzün Tolga İnan ◽  
Neslihan Gökmen

As long as people and freights need to move from one place to another, the civil aviation industry will always exist. In this study, a country-based examination has been made on total airfreight transport. Also, gross domestic product (GDP) and total population data were included in this study. 50 countries were selected according to the most recent value that included the years 2018 or 2019 and 26 of these were included in the analysis which was covered in all three rankings. The purpose of the study is to find the similarities between countries based on the total airfreight transportation, total GDP, and total population. The relationship between the three parameters was examined with the correlation analysis. Afterward, the associated parameters were taken as independent variables and the total airfreight transportation variable was modeled by multiple linear regression analysis. In light of these analyses, GDP and total population have a significant impact on total airfreight transportation. To check the assumptions related to outliers, residuals are determined. To show the outliers and the similarities of the countries clearly, the multidimensional scaling method is used. Multidimensional scaling configuration shows that Turkey and the United Kingdom have similarities in terms of total airfreight numbers.


1966 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 93-97
Author(s):  
Richard Woolley

It is now possible to determine proper motions of high-velocity objects in such a way as to obtain with some accuracy the velocity vector relevant to the Sun. If a potential field of the Galaxy is assumed, one can compute an actual orbit. A determination of the velocity of the globular clusterωCentauri has recently been completed at Greenwich, and it is found that the orbit is strongly retrograde in the Galaxy. Similar calculations may be made, though with less certainty, in the case of RR Lyrae variable stars.


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