Auditory fusion matters in everyday hearing.
| Photo Credit: Mohamed Marey/Unsplash
Auditory fusion is when two sounds arrive so close together in time that the ear and brain treat them as a single event.
The smallest time gap between two sounds that still lets you hear them separately is called the fusion threshold. With very short, sharp sounds (like clicks), many listeners need a gap of about 2-3 ms to separate them. More complex sounds like tones, syllables, and percussive warrant more time, often 5-10 ms but sometimes more. Louder sounds, background echoes, and differences in pitch or timbre can also shift this threshold.
Fusion matters in everyday hearing. In rooms with strong echoes, the first sound and its early reflections may arrive within a few milliseconds of each other. If they fall inside the fusion window, you can hear one clearer sound rather than a cluster. This is related to the precedence effect: when two similar sounds arrive from different places with a short delay, you hear one sound coming from the first source, based on which your ear and brain determine the direction of the source.
Auditory fusion isn’t the same as masking. Masking is when one sound hides another because it’s stronger or very close in time or frequency. Fusion is a decision by the brain to fuse separate arrivals into one.
Engineers use these facts in audio compression, to process speech, and to build concert halls — by spacing out or merging sounds to improve clarity and intelligibility.
Published – November 02, 2025 05:02 pm IST

