Raymond Dye

Title/s:  Professor Emeritus

Office #:  225 Coffey Hall

Phone: 773-508-3018

Email: rdye@luc.edu

Degrees

Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley (1980) Specialty: Biological Psychology
Masters: University of California, Berkeley
Bachelors: University of California, Berkeley (1975)

Research Interests

My research is predominately in the area of human auditory information processing, with an emphasis on binaural hearing and sound localization. At the center of my research program is the question of how the auditory system, when operating in complex, multisource acoustic environments, "parses" the frequency components that are present to form auditory objects; how it assigns frequency components to their particular sound sources. My research is particularly aimed at examining the role that spatial hearing plays in segregating concurrent acoustic stimuli, although I have also examined the manner in which binaural cues interact with other variables that promote segregation of sources.  My goal is to develop a set of objective psychophysical procedures that allows one to characterize the tendency of listeners to analytically/synthetically process information across different stimulus dimensions. I have recently become interested in the effects of musical training on the ability to selectively attend to one sound and ignore other concurrent sounds.

Professional & Community Affiliations

Acoustical Society of America
American Psychological Society

Courses Taught

Psychology 240 The Psychology and Biology of Perception
Psychology 250 Cognitive Psychology
Psychology 304 Statistics
Psychology 311 Lab in Psychobiology
Psychology 314 Lab in Experimental Psychology: Cognition
Psychology 316 Lab in Experimental Psychology: Sensation and Perception
Psychology 382 Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience
Psychology 387 Capstone in Seminar in Behavioral and Cognitive Neurosciences

Selected Publications

Dye, R. H., Boomer, J., Frankel, J., Hill, J. P., and Peloquin, A. N (2016). “Lateralization of simulated sources and echoes differing in frequency based on interaural temporal differences,” Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 140, 4472-4489.

Dye, R. H., Brown, C., Stellmack, M. A, Gallegos, J., and Yost, W. A. (2006).  “The Influence of Later Arriving Sounds on the Ability of Listeners to Judge the Lateral Position of a Source,” Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 120, 3946-3956.

Dye, R.H., Stellmack, M. A., Jurcin, N. F. (2005). “Observer weighting strategies in interaural-time difference discrimination and monaural level discrimination for multi-tone complexes,” Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 117, 3079-3090.