Adaptation to altered or non-individual head-related transfer functions (HRTFs) has been widely studied in individuals with normal hearing. Studies have shown that after an adaptation period, individuals can significantly improve their sound localization performance with altered cues. Recently, it has been shown that after training with one set of HRTFs, improvements can also be observed with another set, a phenomenon referred to as generalization. This study provides significantly more evidence of this phenomenon by including a larger number of participant groups and a longer training period compared to prior work. The experiment involved four groups of participants: two control groups (one with individual HRTFs, one with non-individual HRTFs) only performing localization tests and two training groups (one with individual HRTFs, one with non-individual HRTFs) completing both localization tests and training sessions. In all cases, the stimulus consisted of a male speech sentence reproduced binaurally. Both training groups showed significant and comparable improvements in localization performance. Moreover, generalization effects were observed and found to be similar between the two training groups.
Meyer et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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