Rainer Guski
Ruhr University Bochum
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Featured researches published by Rainer Guski.
Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2003
Rainer Guski; Nikolaus F. Troje
We report three experiments in which visual or audiovisual displays depicted a surface (target) set into motion shortly after one or more events occurred. A visual motion was used as an initial event, followed directly either by the target motion or by one of three marker events: a collision sound, ablink of the target stimulus, or the blink together with the sound. The delay between the initial event and the onset of the target motion was varied systematically. The subjects had to rate the degree of perceived causality between these events. The results of the first experiment showed a systematic decline of causality judgments with an increasing time delay. Causality judgments increased when additional auditory or visual information marked the onset of the target motion. Visual blinks of the target and auditoryclacks produced similar causality judgments. The second experiment tested several models of audiovisual causal processing by varying the position of the sound within the visual delay period. No systematic effect of the sound position occurred. The third experiment showed a subjective shortening of delaysfilled by a clack sound, as compared withunfilled delays. However, this shortening cannot fully explain the increased tolerance for delays containing the clack sound. Taken together, the results are consistent with the interpretation that the main source of the causality judgments in our experiments is the impression of a plausible unitary event and that perfect synchrony is not necessary in this case.
Perception | 2004
Stephan Getzmann; Jörg Lewald; Rainer Guski
The final position of a moving visual object usually appears to be displaced in the direction of motion. We investigated this phenomenon, termed representational momentum, in the auditory modality. In a dark anechoic environment, an acoustic target (continuous noise or noise pulses) moved from left to right or from right to left along the frontal horizontal plane. Listeners judged the final position of the target using a hand pointer. Target velocity was 8° s−1 or 16° s−1. Generally, the final target positions were localised as displaced in the direction of motion. With presentation of continuous noise, target velocity had a strong influence on mean displacement: displacements were stronger with lower velocity. No influence of sound velocity on displacement was found with motion of pulsed noise. Although these findings suggest that the underlying mechanisms may be different in the auditory and visual modality, the occurrence of displacements indicates that representational-momentum-like effects are not restricted to the visual modality, but may reflect a general phenomenon with judgments of dynamic events.
Perception | 1990
Rainer Guski
Based on anatomical and evolutionary conceptions of the human ear, an experiment was conducted in which forty-eight human subjects were asked to localize sounds (a human voice) emitted by one of twenty-seven stationary loudspeakers in an anechoic chamber. The position of the active loudspeaker varied with respect to azimuth, distance, and elevation in three steps each. The position of a single sound-reflecting surface (about 6 m2) was varied: on the floor, on the ceiling, to the left, and to the right. The accuracy of identifying the active loudspeaker for each position of the sound-reflecting surface was compared intraindividually with the absence of reflection. The results show an overall increase in correct localizations with a sound-reflecting surface on the floor. Especially the elevation of the sound source can be detected with greater precision. Additionally, the percentage of correct localizations decreased systematically with the presence of a sound-reflecting ceiling, while the presence of sound-reflecting walls did not systematically affect the localization performance. Judgments in the horizontal plane and those of distance were not systematically influenced by the presence of a sound-reflecting surface.
Environment and Behavior | 2000
Ellen Matthies; Rainer Höger; Rainer Guski
The study evaluated stress-related complaints of residents living on contaminated ground. Two hundred and fifteen residents of an area that was contaminated by toxics of a former coking plant (toxins were benzo(a)pyrene, dicyclopentadi-ene, benzol, toluol, and xylol) were compared to a control group composed of 200 subjects living in an uncontaminated part of the same city. Data are based on a standardized interview concerning stress-related somatic and psychological symptoms and on exposure parameters. The residents of the contaminated area were also required to report their estimation of danger and trust in the city council’s managing of the redevelopment. The results show that the residents reported significantly more stress symptoms than the control group. In a stepwise regression analysis, symptoms turned out to be best predicted by cognitive variables. Exposure parameters were excluded from the regression model because they provided a comparatively small contribution to the explanation of variance.
Journal of Sound and Vibration | 2001
J.M. Fields; R.G. de Jong; Truls Gjestland; I.H. Flindell; R.F.S. Job; S. Kurra; P. Lercher; M. Vallet; Takashi Yano; Rainer Guski; U. Felscher-Suhr; R. Schumer
Noise & Health | 2004
Rainer Guski
Noise & Health | 1999
Rainer Guski
Cognitive Brain Research | 2003
Jörg Lewald; Rainer Guski
Journal of Sound and Vibration | 1999
Rainer Guski; U. Felscher-Suhr; R. Schuemer
Behavioural Brain Research | 2001
Jörg Lewald; Walter H. Ehrenstein; Rainer Guski