Audibility of Audio Power Amplifier Distortions
Reply #108 – 2014-12-01 17:51:37
Here is another insight from the test notes: Notice what great thing about pink noise: it keeps repeating so when you switch back and forth, you hear the "same" thing. Why is that important? It is because of how our hearing works. The first part of our perception is a "tape recorder" that captures everything that is being delivered by the ear. Think of this as a lossless recorder. This is the short-term memory and highly reliable. Ever ask someone to repeat something only to remember exactly what they said? That is short term memory recall. As you can imagine, the volume of such data can be huge. Estimates are in many megabytes in computer terms. There would be no way to keep recording and recording everything that comes in. To get around this problem, the short term memory has strict limits on it measured in seconds. Different research gives different numbers for this but it is "short few seconds" before the data is overwritten. What happens next is smart filtering. The cognitive part of the brain kicks in to extract useful information. Was that your loved one talking? Female voice? Piano playing? Etc. This is your longer term memory and is based on characteristics extracted from the short term memory. Now you in kilobits order of magnitude so a lot can be saved and recalled. When the differences are huge, like a male person talking instead of female, we can use our long term memory. But when differences get small where brain classification would ignore, then we must rely on short term memory. Back to the test, the pink noise keeps repeating with the same characteristic. So we can switch and instantly hear the difference. With music, that was not so in his testing. The music kept playing linearly. Going "back" to the previous source did not give you the same content as was just heard. This means that you must rely on the much less accurate longer term memory classification. They tried to deploy a useful technique which is to pick something like a long note that lasts for a bit. This way when you switch inputs you are still hearing something similar. But similar is not the same as what was heard. When differences get small, you want to re-hear the exact same thing. As such, it is critical to be able to give the user the ability to loop and re-hear the same segment as was just heard. From countless listening tests I have performed I can tell you with 100% confidence that the reliability of the test suffers and suffers big time when all that is provided is linear playback. I want to hear that one piano reverb trail that may be 1 or 1.5 seconds. I want to focus on that detail. I don't want to hear one note for one input and another note for the other input. When we don't provide such tools to the listener, the last part of the quote comes true. It becomes very frustrating to perform the test. You think you heard something but when you try to go "back" to it, the music has already gone forward. So you have to re-listen and that quickly becomes tedious. And tiredness means more mistakes. Listeners start to vote randomly or just vote "A" which the latter explaining why we don't always land at 50-50 negative outcome. Easy segment selection and looping is essential to finding small differences. Give me a good tool for that and the job becomes hugely simpler. You can see that in my double blind ABX test results. I am able to finish these tests with lightning speed when I have that ability. I give Foobar ABX plug-in pretty poor ratings in this regard by the way. Segment selection is painful due to poor user interface implementation. The new one unfortunately does not fix that and piles on more problems on top of that.