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Roy June 22nd 04 06:24 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 

"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Andy Evans wrote:
How does the cochlea separate a complex sound into its different
frequency components?


It doesn't - it's part of a simple microphone. The brain does the clever
bits.


I was under the impression that different parts of the cochlea are sensitive
to different frequency bands...??

Roy




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Fleetie June 22nd 04 06:57 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
"Nick Gorham" wrote
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article ,
Andy Evans wrote:

How does the cochlea separate a complex sound into its different
frequency components?



It doesn't - it's part of a simple microphone. The brain does the clever
bits.


I woudn't argue that the brain does the clever bits, but the little I
have read about the subject shows that the operation of the cochlea is
nothing like any microphone I have seen, and is far from simple.


Yeah.

Micro-hairs at different positions along the length of the inside of
the cochlea respond to different frequencies.

It's been years since my degree now, but the whole thing is rather
elaborate.

If you care, you (pl.) could google for something like

cochlea hairs frequencies "organ of corti" window

Hmm, just tried the above; it works ok.


Martin
--
M.A.Poyser Tel.: 07967 110890
Manchester, U.K. http://www.fleetie.demon.co.uk





Dave Plowman (News) June 22nd 04 07:08 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
In article ,
Roy rp wrote:
It doesn't - it's part of a simple microphone. The brain does the
clever bits.


I was under the impression that different parts of the cochlea are
sensitive to different frequency bands...??


It's not linear, unlike a decent microphone. But the brain sorts that out
too.

--
*Is it true that cannibals don't eat clowns because they taste funny?

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.

Arny Krueger June 22nd 04 07:37 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
"Andy Evans" wrote in message

As they say, audio is engineering, music is art.

...you can see engineering, you can touch engineering and you can
measure engineering but you can't hear engineering.


I don't know about that "You can't hear engineering" stuff. You can
definately hear some examples of bad engineering.

Isn't hearing phenomena called psychoacoustics?


It's related.

"Psychoacoustics can be defined simply as the psychological study of

hearing."

You have obviously not read some of the best-known and classic works related
to psychoustics, Zwicker and Fastl for example.

The aim of psychoacoustic research is to find out how
hearing works.


That's more like it.

In other words, the aim is to discover how sounds
entering the ear are processed by the ear and the brain in order to
give the listener useful information about the world outside.


That goes well afield of "the psychological study of hearing". For example,
psychoacoustics included the physiological study of hearing.

Some of the hot areas of psychoacoustic research at the time of writing

a

How do we separate sounds occurring simultaneously (e.g. two speakers
speaking at once)?


A mixture of temporal and spectral separation of sounds and decoding.

How do we localize sounds in space?


A mixture of temporal and spectral analysis of sounds.

How do we determine the pitch of, say, a musical instrument?


That's spectral analysis.

How does the cochlea separate a complex sound into its different
frequency components?


Vibrating hairs acting on the basilar membrane activating nerves connected
to the brain.

Determining the abilities and limitations of human hearing is
invaluable in helping us to use sounds in our environment.


The biggest milestone in psychoacoustics to date is arguably perceptual
coding, an example of which is the well-known MP3 coding of music and
speech. It's an interesting process - the information content of sounds are
reduced by 90% or more with minimal perceptual loss.

Any device that produces sound for the purpose of human listening should

take
account of what the listener's ears are going to do with that sound."


Which is one reason why I don't take all those earnest reports of sonic
differences due to different choices among well-engineered capacitors, too
seriously.



Arny Krueger June 22nd 04 07:38 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message

In article ,
Andy Evans wrote:
How does the cochlea separate a complex sound into its different
frequency components?


It doesn't - it's part of a simple microphone. The brain does the
clever bits.


More than a microphone, the ear embodies a pretty interesting spectrum
analyzer as well.



Stewart Pinkerton June 22nd 04 11:04 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
On Tue, 22 Jun 2004 18:53:32 +0100, Nick Gorham
wrote:

Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article ,
Andy Evans wrote:

How does the cochlea separate a complex sound into its different
frequency components?



It doesn't - it's part of a simple microphone. The brain does the clever
bits.


I woudn't argue that the brain does the clever bits, but the little I
have read about the subject shows that the operation of the cochlea is
nothing like any microphone I have seen, and is far from simple.


OK, it's a broad-band mechanical transducer connected to a series of
narrow-band electro-mechanical transducers. Still relatively simple.
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Stewart Pinkerton June 22nd 04 11:04 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
On 22 Jun 2004 14:07:42 GMT, ohawker (Andy
Evans) wrote:

As they say, audio is engineering, music is art.

...you can see engineering, you can touch engineering and you can measure
engineering but you can't hear engineering. Isn't hearing phenomena called
psychoacoustics?
"Psychoacoustics can be defined simply as the psychological study of hearing.
The aim of psychoacoustic research is to find out how hearing works. In other
words, the aim is to discover how sounds entering the ear are processed by the
ear and the brain in order to give the listener useful information about the
world outside.Some of the hot areas of psychoacoustic research at the time of
writing a
How do we separate sounds occurring simultaneously (e.g. two speakers speaking
at once)?
How do we localise sounds in space?
How do we determine the pitch of, say, a musical instrument?
How does the cochlea separate a complex sound into its different frequency
components?
Determining the abilities and limitations of human hearing is invaluable in
helping us to use sounds in our environment. Any device that produces sound for
the purpose of human listening should take account of what the listener's ears
are going to do with that sound. "


The above are well-known to many branches of neurophysiology and
psychology.

And your point is?

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Stewart Pinkerton June 22nd 04 11:04 PM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
On 22 Jun 2004 10:05:58 GMT, ohawker (Andy
Evans) wrote:

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?


It's an audio group, as you might hopefully have deduced from its
title..........

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Jim Lesurf June 23rd 04 09:14 AM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
In article , Nick Gorham
wrote:
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Andy Evans
wrote:

How does the cochlea separate a complex sound into its different
frequency components?



It doesn't - it's part of a simple microphone. The brain does the
clever bits.


I woudn't argue that the brain does the clever bits, but the little I
have read about the subject shows that the operation of the cochlea is
nothing like any microphone I have seen, and is far from simple.


It is. :-) I've been looking into this in recent years, and the current
physiological understanding of the cochlea is mind-bogglingly complex. One
model is to regard it as a non-linear dispersive set of linked transmission
lines (with characteristics that vary along their lengths) upon which the
sensors are a series of non-linear *active* resonant detectors whose
effective gain and bandwidth vary with the signal levels they experience.

(This only covers the physical/mechanical side. After that comes the
nerves.. and I've also ignored the biochemistry of what 'pumps' the active
parts of the system. ;- )

I've now written a few articles on this for mags like "Hi Fi News", and
some of the material is now at

http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioM...ing/index.html

if anyone is interested.

Bear in mind that what I've written is very much a *simplified* version of
what the physiologists now use as a model, but even so it has some
surprising implications for audio/hifi... :-)

Slainte,

Jim

--
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Audio Misc http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioMisc/index.html
Armstrong Audio http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/Audio/armstrong.html
Barbirolli Soc. http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/JBSoc/JBSoc.html

Don Pearce June 23rd 04 09:54 AM

Is this an audio group, a group for music lovers or an engineering group?
 
On Wed, 23 Jun 2004 10:14:07 +0100, Jim Lesurf
wrote:



I've now written a few articles on this for mags like "Hi Fi News", and
some of the material is now at

http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioM...ing/index.html

if anyone is interested.

Bear in mind that what I've written is very much a *simplified* version of
what the physiologists now use as a model, but even so it has some
surprising implications for audio/hifi... :-)

Slainte,

Jim


Jim, I remember well a demo I heard many years ago. The sound was of a
person reading words out slowly against a noise background. The
background was sufficiently loud that it was impossible to work out
the words. We listened several times, but still no intelligibility The
proctor then told us what a couple of the words actually were. As if
by magic, these words were suddenly clearly audible against the noise,
whilst the rest remained inaudible.

I don't suppose you know where a copy of this test may be found? It is
really impressive.

d
Pearce Consulting
http://www.pearce.uk.com


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