Los puntos clave no están disponibles para este artículo en este momento.
Electric charge has long been hypothesized to be the effective stimulus variable that determines loudness evoked by directly stimulating the auditory nerve. This 'equal-charge, equal-loudness' hypothesis predicts that stimulus amplitude and duration can be traded linearly to produce equal loudness. Loudness sensations from threshold to maximum loudness were measured systematically as a function of stimulus amplitude and duration in cochlear implant listeners. The measured data do not support the equal-charge, equal-loudness hypothesis: an increment in stimulus amplitude produces a significantly louder sensation than the same change in stimulus duration. Instead of the linear equal-charge model, a power-function model successfully predicts the measured data and should be used to encode loudness in electric hearing.
Zeng et al. (Mon,) studied this question.