"Robert Morein" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
...
"Robert Morein" wrote in message
[snip]
It's just a class report for an undergraduate class
called "How Things Work".
Here's the home page for the class:
http://web.mit.edu/2.972/OldFiles/www/body.html
It has no proper footnotes, just some broad references.
Look at:
http://illumin.usc.edu/article.php?articleID=45&page=3
"When the source moves off of the center axis (sources B
and C), these differences (as small as 10 microseconds)
are interpreted by the brain as localization cues."
No footnote provided at this point.
Conclusion - someone doesn't know what a proper footnote looks like.
and the bibliography,
http://illumin.usc.edu/article.php?a...e=bibliography
Note that this is mostly a list of references, and not a list of footnotes:
a.. Eargle, John M. Handbook of Recording Engineering: 3rd Edition, Chapman
& Hall, New York (1996).
A rather large book, not a footnote
a.. Everest, F. Alton. The Master Handbook of Acoustics; 3rd Edition,
McGraw-Hill, New York (1994).
ditto
a.. Holman, Tomlinson. 5.1 Surround Sound, Up and Running, Focal Press,
Boston (2000).
A smaller book (208 pp), but still not a footnote
a.. Lennie, Peter. Lecture; The Auditory System,
http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/bcs/programs
/courses/info/245/ARCHIVES/S96/auditory _where.html (1 November 2000).
Not available to the public.
a.. Moss, David. Diagram of ear,
http://www.ulster.net/
~mycoman/eyeear1.html (4 November 2000).
Broken link
a.. Simon Frasier University.
http://www.sfu.ca/sca/
Manuals/ZAAPf/t/the_ear.html (1 November 2000 TMH Corporation (6/21/99).
Broken link.