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Older seperates vs new system
In article , Alan Murphy
wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message [big snip] So. Can you now say what practical test/experiment you can suggest that would be useful to test your hypothesis that the failure is due to 'masking' rather than 'removal' of the audible difference? When I wrote the original post with the term 'masking' I was not aware that it has a particular meaning and significance in audio science, not being familiar with the literature. Having read some relevant papers I now realise that I should have replaced 'masking' with 'the test is not sufficiently sensitive to reveal differences which may be present when using some other method'. My apologies for not being sufficiently clear. Well, that moves the goal-posts a bit. :-) But I don't think that it deals with the real issue I was asking about. I will try to clarify further using your restatement as a basis. Hypothesis 1: Once the levels are equalised the test is not sufficiently sensitive to reveal differences which may be present when using some other method. Hypothesis 2: Once the levels are equalised there are no perceivable differences. What test would allow us to discriminate between these two hypotheses? In one case you draw a conclusion about the test. In the other about perception. For these to be distinct proposals we have to try and do an experiment whose observed results could support one hypothesis and not the other. If we are unable to determine a real test that could distinguish between them, then in what way are the two hypothesis different? The test that I proposed above would indeed reveal whether the AB test is insensitive and to what degree, concordant with the scientific method. Sorry, I'm afraid I am not sure which test you are referring to here. Nor therefore how it shows that - for the situation with audio and equalised levels - it allows you to state "the test is insensitive" as opposed to "any other differences than level are imperceptable". I do not have enough knowledge of the subject to propose a test that would detect low jnd differences in complex scenarios. This, of course, makes it difficult to test the distinction between hypotheses (1) and (2). But then, we can proceed according to the usual scientific method.... The problems here can be expressed in two ways. One is the 'Spock rule'. A difference which makes no difference *is* no difference. i.e. that if when we equalise the levels we can't percieve any difference, then in practice there is no difference so far as human perception is concerned. The other is the normal scientific method of avoiding adding in mechanisms which are not needed to explain the observations. This implies that if we can't hear a difference, then we can conclude that any difference is so small as to be imperceptable *unless* we can devise a test suitable for the situation that might falsify this assumption. In essence, Occam's Razor. So I'd still be interested in seeing what experiment would allow us to test you (modified) hypothesis (1) against (2). If we can't, we can presumably assume that a percieved difference that vanishes when the levels are equalised was due simply due to the difference in levels, and avoid adding in other mechanisms. As I understand it, this is the normal scientific method. Does the above not seem reasonable to you? Incidentally during my "googling" I did notice some suggestion that when different signals are presented simultaneously to seperate ears much smaller differences can be detected than when these signals are presented to both ears serially. Any ideas on this? Afraid I don't know. Although I would guess that it may be because symultaneous signals can be compared 'directly' by the brain whereas when presented serially this has to be a comparison between a current signal and a 'memory'. (Even if the memory is an effect at a physiological level, or at least below conscious memory.) I have read about various types of experiments that indicate our perception of things like dissonance depends upon both signals being present in the same ear (or not). I'd assume that in part these things are due to indvidual nonlinearities in each ear, and in part due to the ways the signals are combined in the brain to give us spatial perception. But apart from these generalisations, I dunno. :-) 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 |
Older seperates vs new system
[huge snip of anal material]
Jim, you've got your head totally up your arse about equalistion. This was a total red herring. Alan. "You're still my favourite contributor on any ng" :-) |
Older seperates vs new system
In article , Alan Murphy
wrote: [huge snip of anal material] Jim, you've got your head totally up your arse about equalistion. Actually, all I was trying to do was see if your views were of any value, and hence worth taking seriously. This was a total red herring. From what you now write I take it the answer is, "No", and that you accept that the ideas you were putting forwards are not really worth considering. OK. Alan. "You're still my favourite contributor on any ng" :-) Funny way of showing it. If you like someone I'd expect you to be polite and considerate towards them. Not evade their questions and then duck out with a "head up arse" comment. 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 |
Older seperates vs new system
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message ... On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 08:25:55 +0000 (UTC), "Alan Murphy" wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 08:48:58 +0000 (UTC), "Alan Murphy" wrote: Because the DAC is much quieter and I can identify it every time :-) Alan What do you mean by quieter - less background noise or less volume? If the volume is less, then in use you would compensate by turning the wick up a bit and end up with the same volume again. So to compare quality you would still need to equalise the sound levels. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Both, but I was just trying to make a point really, Don, about the difficulty of establishing proper procedures when testing sensory descrimination. In the visual field, with which I am familiar, very slight alterations in test procedure, such as seperating contiguous samples by a few mm or so can decrease discrimination of colour difference by an order of magnitude. Presenting the samples, in series, in A/B fashion, further greatly decreases discrimination depending on the time interval between viewings. The differences are still there of course but are masked by the method of testing. Resort to instrumentation is not helpful in judging differences below about 5 - 10 jnd's, depending on position in colour space, due to the acuity of the visual system. I suspect the same holds true for auditory differences. That is *precisely* why level-matched time-proximate ABX (and ABChr) testing has proven over many decades to be the *most* sensitive test for audible differences in sound quality. One cannot of course discriminate well between two sound sources played simultaneously, unlike a side by side visual presentation, plus of course it's true that our visual sense has significantly more acuity than our aural sense. Given the above, I never fail to be amused by all those 'high enders' who insist that ABX is insensitive, and the only *real* way to discriminate subtle differences is by living with the sound for sevberal days or weeks, changing over the cabling in a leisurely fashion. As you correctly note, if you do that with say a couple of colour prints, you'll completely fail to notice quite serious colour casts. Look at those prints in quick succession in the same light, of course.................. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering Why if the visual sense is more cute than the aural can we get away with greater levels of video compression than Audio compression before we begin to notice the quality suffering? Why is the eye so much easier to trick? |
Older seperates vs new system
"Alan Murphy" wrote in message ... "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message ... In article , Alan Murphy wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message [big snip to avoid repeating my sequence of questions] I think it might be clearer, Jim, if I just outline my views on the subject and hope that you find this acceptable. I'm afraid that your mode of response does not actually seem 'clearer' to me as you have not dealt with the main issue I was specifically asking you about. (Please see below.) I agree that, for the results to be meaningful in AB testing, levels should be equalised and regret that my devious attempts to wind up Stewart were misinterpreted. OK. I do feel however that AB testing is possibly not a suitable test for revealing differences close to 1 jnd and is accurate to perhaps 5 jnd. [snip] I appreciate that you may "feel" something. I also appreciate that you might be correct. However, since you seem to be arguing on the basis of taking an academic approach founded upon applying the scientific method, my questions were to invite you to apply this to your own statements. As for a test to determine whether AB testing is sufficiently sensitive to distinguish small audio differences I would propose the following: It should be possible to determine minimum audible differences of 1 jnd over a discrete range of frequencies on a test setup, say from 1000 to 15000Hz at 2000 Hz intervals. A set of digital AB samples to Red Book CD standard at normal listening levels would then be prepared, one of which would be a pure tone at each of the frequencies and the other would be the same tone corrupted at alternate values by positive then negative random increments of digital noise varying from 0 to 5 jnd. My prediction is that an AB test on these samples would not be able to distinguish differences of less than 5 jnd. Over to you. My series of questions was partly to establish if I had understood you correctly. Partly to establish what test you had in mind that could be carried out and whose results could distinguish between your hypothesis that the failure was due to 'masking' and the alternative hypothesis that the failure was due to 'removal' of the actual differences. Unfortunately, your reply does not deal with this point. I carefully arranged my series of questions so that all but the last could be answered fairly quickly and simply with a 'yes' or a 'no'. I would have preferred this as it seems clearer to me that your restatement. However the key question was the last one (restated above) so I'd like to know your answer to this. Or do you accept that when you argue that the failure is due to 'masking' this is no more than a personal belief? The outline you give from visual experiments is an analogy. This may or may not be an appropriate analogy. To test this we would require a response to the question which you did not deal with. So. Can you now say what practical test/experiment you can suggest that would be useful to test your hypothesis that the failure is due to 'masking' rather than 'removal' of the audible difference? When I wrote the original post with the term 'masking' I was not aware that it has a particular meaning and significance in audio science, not being familiar with the literature. Having read some relevant papers I now realise that I should have replaced 'masking' with 'the test is not sufficiently sensitive to reveal differences which may be present when using some other method'. My apologies for not being sufficiently clear. The test that I proposed above would indeed reveal whether the AB test is insensitive and to what degree, concordant with the scientific method. I do not have enough knowledge of the subject to propose a test that would detect low jnd differences in complex scenarios. Incidentally during my "googling" I did notice some suggestion that when different signals are presented simultaneously to seperate ears much smaller differences can be detected than when these signals are presented to both ears serially. Any ideas on this? Alan. One of the main functions of the hearing system is as a comparator, of sorts, in order to judge the orientation of the source of sound. So I would guess the system is particularly sensitive to any differences between whatever is entering the ears at a given moment in time. |
Older seperates vs new system
"The EggKing" wrote in message ... "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message ... On Fri, 17 Sep 2004 08:25:55 +0000 (UTC), "Alan Murphy" wrote: "Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On Thu, 16 Sep 2004 08:48:58 +0000 (UTC), "Alan Murphy" wrote: Because the DAC is much quieter and I can identify it every time :-) Alan What do you mean by quieter - less background noise or less volume? If the volume is less, then in use you would compensate by turning the wick up a bit and end up with the same volume again. So to compare quality you would still need to equalise the sound levels. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com Both, but I was just trying to make a point really, Don, about the difficulty of establishing proper procedures when testing sensory descrimination. In the visual field, with which I am familiar, very slight alterations in test procedure, such as seperating contiguous samples by a few mm or so can decrease discrimination of colour difference by an order of magnitude. Presenting the samples, in series, in A/B fashion, further greatly decreases discrimination depending on the time interval between viewings. The differences are still there of course but are masked by the method of testing. Resort to instrumentation is not helpful in judging differences below about 5 - 10 jnd's, depending on position in colour space, due to the acuity of the visual system. I suspect the same holds true for auditory differences. That is *precisely* why level-matched time-proximate ABX (and ABChr) testing has proven over many decades to be the *most* sensitive test for audible differences in sound quality. One cannot of course discriminate well between two sound sources played simultaneously, unlike a side by side visual presentation, plus of course it's true that our visual sense has significantly more acuity than our aural sense. Given the above, I never fail to be amused by all those 'high enders' who insist that ABX is insensitive, and the only *real* way to discriminate subtle differences is by living with the sound for sevberal days or weeks, changing over the cabling in a leisurely fashion. As you correctly note, if you do that with say a couple of colour prints, you'll completely fail to notice quite serious colour casts. Look at those prints in quick succession in the same light, of course.................. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering Why if the visual sense is more cute than the aural can we get away with greater levels of video compression than Audio compression before we begin to notice the quality suffering? Why is the eye so much easier to trick? No idea - it's a big subject and I believe you can effect an acceptable animation with as little as 3 frames a second, but what interests me is am I the only one who is noticing the truly crap 'digital' colour in movies these days? Recently viewed films like Master & Commander and Northfork have absolutely *terrible* fake-looking colour whilst Black Narcissus (nearly 60 years old), which I watched a few evenings ago, is a visual feast, even with its 'hand coloured Himalayas'!! Seems to me, that movies (like music) have only got worse in the last so many decades!! (Not to mention the 'cocoa powder' effect on a lot of digital TV pictures also!!!) |
Older seperates vs new system
Keith G wrote:
what interests me is am I the only one who is noticing the truly crap 'digital' colour in movies these days? No idea if its anything digital or otherwise, but whatever they filmed the matrix on was utter garbage - you could see the grain on the film easily. |
Older seperates vs new system
On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 22:26:21 +0100, Ian Molton wrote:
Keith G wrote: what interests me is am I the only one who is noticing the truly crap 'digital' colour in movies these days? No idea if its anything digital or otherwise, but whatever they filmed the matrix on was utter garbage - you could see the grain on the film easily. Probably done on purpose, to give that 'film noir' look. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
Older seperates vs new system
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 22:26:21 +0100, Ian Molton wrote: Keith G wrote: what interests me is am I the only one who is noticing the truly crap 'digital' colour in movies these days? No idea if its anything digital or otherwise, but whatever they filmed the matrix on was utter garbage - you could see the grain on the film easily. Probably done on purpose, to give that 'film noir' look. Agreed. Its not like they didn't have the money or technology for a clearer picture. |
Older seperates vs new system
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message On Thu, 30 Sep 2004 22:26:21 +0100, Ian Molton wrote: Keith G wrote: what interests me is am I the only one who is noticing the truly crap 'digital' colour in movies these days? No idea if its anything digital or otherwise, but whatever they filmed the matrix on was utter garbage - you could see the grain on the film easily. Probably done on purpose, to give that 'film noir' look. Agreed. Its not like they didn't have the money or technology for a clearer picture. I believe the Matrix films have a deliberate green tint to depict 'being inside the Matrix' but, interestingly, filmed only on 35mm it would appear....?? (Too much location work for 70mm I suppose?) My problem is with the predominance of 'hazy blue, dim/dark, nearly monochromatic' pix like: Gothika Northfork Payback ....all of which we have watched lately, in that order. (There are a great number of other flics that are much the same, but which do not come readily to mind.) While the deliberate 'downtoning' of Northfolk depicts well the 'bleakness' of the situation (at the cost of some stunning views of the Montana vastness*), it being sandwiched by the other two, simply simply invokes an 'oh gawd, not another bloody dim, Hollywood 'blue' movie here! It would be easy to take a cheap shot here and suggest that the hazy/grainy/'digitised' modern films (as opposed to the lurid, Technicolour oldies) mirror the modern, mass tastes for digital/ss music over analogue/valve, but I don't think it's as simple as that - I have no problem with grain (or even 'noise') and certainly prefer the use of *good* CGI to the 'wobbly models' we've seen in many older films, but I can't help feeling that 'movie' standards are actually on the decline, like everything else...?? Coming Soon (mebbe tonight) - Gone With The Wind! (Believe it or not I've never seen it - it's going to be very interesting from a colour POV, if nothing else!) 'Audio' relevance in this post? - Easy, the soundtrack in Northfork is quite superb throughout and *must* be heard! :-) *Seeing the bitter, bleak shots of Montana in Northfork prompts me to ask 'how can a nation that once had the utter *balls* to deal with conditions/terrain like that evolve into the nation of loud-mouthed, fat-arsed couch potatoes we see on the box today? (Or is it just 'poor sampling' - I'd like to think so....) |
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