4.5 Article

Web-based psychoacoustics: Hearing screening, infrastructure, and validation

Journal

BEHAVIOR RESEARCH METHODS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13428-023-02101-9

Keywords

Web-based testing; Psychoacoustics; Remote hearing screening; Crowd-sourcing; Online auditory experiments

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Anonymous web-based experiments are being used more and more in behavioral research, but studying auditory perception online is challenging due to limited control over acoustics and the inability to perform audiometry. This study outlines an approach to address these challenges and validates the procedures using web-based measurements compared to lab-based data.
Anonymous web-based experiments are increasingly used in many domains of behavioral research. However, online studies of auditory perception, especially of psychoacoustic phenomena pertaining to low-level sensory processing, are challenging because of limited available control of the acoustics, and the inability to perform audiometry to confirm normal-hearing status of participants. Here, we outline our approach to mitigate these challenges and validate our procedures by comparing web-based measurements to lab-based data on a range of classic psychoacoustic tasks. Individual tasks were created using jsPsych, an open-source JavaScript front-end library. Dynamic sequences of psychoacoustic tasks were implemented using Django, an open-source library for web applications, and combined with consent pages, questionnaires, and debriefing pages. Subjects were recruited via Prolific, a subject recruitment platform for web-based studies. Guided by a meta-analysis of lab-based data, we developed and validated a screening procedure to select participants for (putative) normal-hearing status based on their responses in a suprathreshold task and a survey. Headphone use was standardized by supplementing procedures from prior literature with a binaural hearing task. Individuals meeting all criteria were re-invited to complete a range of classic psychoacoustic tasks. For the re-invited participants, absolute thresholds were in excellent agreement with lab-based data for fundamental frequency discrimination, gap detection, and sensitivity to interaural time delay and level difference. Furthermore, word identification scores, consonant confusion patterns, and co-modulation masking release effect also matched lab-based studies. Our results suggest that web-based psychoacoustics is a viable complement to lab-based research. Source code for our infrastructure is provided.

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