Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#162
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Harry Lavo" wrote in message news:JJO0c.433001$I06.4901420@attbi_s01...
What you are saying above is a very reasonable position. Unfortunately, it seems to believed only in the abstract here. When somebody such as Michael comes on saying he can hear differences in amps...there is no questioning him on his listening conditions, no consideration of the age or circuitry of the amps in question (despite one being a digital amp...the one chosen at that). .no discussion of his stated purpose or state of mind. All that happens is that he is told because he listened sighted, he is surely imagining things. Then the turmoil ensues. I should point out that the Sony TA-N88B, the digital amp, was far and away the best and most obviously different. It was this amp that my friend Bob heard compared to the Harmon-Kardon. He said it was 'easy' to tell them apart. I chose this amp, but unfortunately it kept failing, an apparent congenital defect of this product. Since it kept failing, I returned it. I then had to repeat the whole series of tests, to find an acceptable amp to purchase that would not break down. I ended up with the Denon, which was the best of the rest. I still own that amp, bought in 1986, and it works quite fine. |
#163
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Harry Lavo" wrote:
"Nousaine" wrote in message ... "Harry Lavo" wrote" ...snips to content .... I think the subjectivists actually find this topic of great interest, based on how frequently they post in these threads... You think the objectivists ever let an assertion of heard differences pass without comment or challenge? Try this: I, Tom Nousaine, analyzed nearly 2 dozen published controlled listening tests of power amplifiers that had been conducted to that time, of which only 2 (both high-output impedance tubed amplifiers; one of which was authored by Arny Krueger) had confirmed positives for audibility. Prior and subsequent to that time I've personally confirmed that more than a dozen amplifiers I've owned (or used) all sound exactly the same when operated within their power limits (Heathkit (2), Parasound (3), Stewart (2) , Fidek, Samson, Adcom, Bryston (4), B&K, SUMO, PASS and Yamaha) either to me or the several dozens of subjects employed under listening bias controlled conditions; even when conditions were maximally implemented to high-light possible differences. But whenever I mention any given experiment subjectivists never let that pass without challenge. The above suggests two possible conclusions: 1) there are no sound differences between amplifiers, except possibly between tube and solid state based on the output impedance of the tube amp, or: 2) the test used interferes with and confuses the normal ear-brain interpretation of music that audiophiles normally use, and therefore is insensitive to any but the grossest and simplest differences (eg. large two-dimensional differences in volume or frequency response). You and other converted believers simply ignore the latter possibility and have never attempted to validate the adequacy of your preferred tests. I and other subjectivists over the years have argued the case for the possibility that number two is the operative factor, and have argued for alternative tests, only to have it fall on deaf ears. Subsequently, most subjectivists have simple given up and gone on making choices their own way and living happily ever after. I and Mike and Wheel and a few others have chosen to stay, and stay vocal...but without letting it ruin our enjoyment of the hobby. Sure; do whatever you want. That's exactly what I do. But why encourage lurkers to ignore the current body of evidence (none of which you have supplied) and throw energy and resources at 'problems' that, at best, 'may' exist in a very small number of special circumstances? |
#164
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Michael Scarpitti" wrote in message
news:81y1c.33527$ko6.326528@attbi_s02... "Norman Schwartz" wrote in message ... "Michael Scarpitti" wrote in message ... Stewart Pinkerton wrote in message news:w241c.28038$PR3.503763@attbi_s03... (snip) If you would like, go to an audio shop that carries used products of this kind, and ask to take them home. Hook them up to a set of Stax Lambdas through a transformer such as the SRD-7. Then you will hear the differences. Not necessarily, plus I've already pointed out that this is a *bad* method for comparing amps, since the load is not representative of normal operation. Since I actually DO use the amp to power the earspeakers, it is indeed a perfectly valid test, in fact the most important test. If it sounds bad with the Stax, I can't use it. You must understand listening over speakers is somewhat less useful, as the resolution is lower in speakers, and coloration of the room enters into it. If you want to know what an amp REALLY sounds like, connect it to a Stax transformer and earspeakers. How then different model Stax cast recordings differently. Even if Stax listening is a measure of how good or bad recordings might be (which in my experience does not reveal whole picture) different listeners are again have differing evaluations. (Perhaps I didn't pick up which model Stax you are using, I use the SRM 313 which drives my SR-303 and SR-X MarkIII simultaneously.) The Stax unit I use is driven directly by the power amp through a transformer, called SRD-7. The one you have has a power amp supplied by Stax. You chose what you want in a power amp, and the sonic character of the power amp is revealed quite clearly by this set-up. Here is a similar set-up: http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?...photoho sting and here is the SRD-7 by itself: http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?...ategory=32 74 If you click on the bottom picure, you can see the power amp taps. The SR-X Mark III headphones which I have came with the SRD-7 (and it' flickering neon lamp). I have driven the SRD-7 with all the amps I've ever owned, Marantz 16B, ARC D76A, GAS Ampzillas, Adcom 555). (I never even dreamed of taking the time and trouble of hooking up my Bryston 7B STs to it.) Using those SR-X headphones, and to the best of my recollection, the sound I heard was no better or different from that using an inexpensive Kenwood receiver. Of course the Stax Lambda headphones cost about 10X more than the Stax I used, and are undoubtedly a better and more critical listening device. The bothersome part of the SRD-7 "transformer", in addition to its flickering neon lamp which Stax assured was normal for a neon lamp, is that it is also a switching devise having terminals for connection to a loudspeaker system. The nature of those terminals being no better than those found on any Radio Shack amp, it always bothered me as to what loudspeaker system Stax envisaged being used with that SRD-7. My feeling about the SRD-7 is that it really isn't very good at all. |
#165
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The missapplication of the razor responce fails because it also requires
that the whole knot be comprehended. If one puts a cloth over connections and reported perceptions of the kind you provide are random, then we account for the larger knot of both the possibility of hardware sources and mental process sources related to knowledge of what is active. An accepted explanatorytheory is the one which is the simplest and accounts for the most information at the same time. The appeal to "repeated and consistant" are meaningless because they were done with full knowledge of which amp was active. The appeal to not knowing about some unknown, not accurate bty, process fails also. If one does the false test where one amp is used but it is thought two are being switched and results of the kind you report occurs demands that the effect lies in the perception process and not the hardware, The razor cuts again, it accounts for both the hardware as possible source and perception process and provides unambiguous results. Dbt usage works, that is the razor edge so sharp as to cause discomfort when the knot of the "obvious" falls away. "The 'extraordinary claim' is yours, not mine. Occam's principle: that nature does not act in a more complicated fashion than necessary, supports the supposition that those who claim to hear gross differences between components actually hear gross differences in the performance of components themselves. The reason is that you must account for a rather complicated behavior for my mind to 'create', ex nihilo, 7 distinctly different sounds for 7 different amps, and be able to re-create these sonic 'signatures' exactly and repeatedly, and only when the amp in question is being listened to, without confusing them. What you're claiming, is that I 'invent' a sonic signature for the Harmon-Kardon, Hafler, 2 different Sony, PS Audio, Denon, and Bryston amps, and not only that, but also keep them consistent over a long period of time, and unconfused. To claim some psychological mechanism (as yet unexplained) is responsible staggers the imagination. Surely THAT is a far more 'extraordinary claim' than my modest claim: the amps sound different because they are different." |
#166
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
(Mkuller) wrote:
Can you spell *v-a-l-i-d-a-t-i-o-n t-e-s-t*? (Nousaine) wrote: I've done the validation test on several occasions. One of the more well knowmn ones was conducted at a hi-fi store where the owner claimed to have been able to easily identify amplifiers in his reference system under even blind conditions. Turns out that he was unable to reliably identify his 10k+ monoblock amplifiers from a used $500 integrated amplifier with nothing more than a opague cloth draped over the terminals so he wasn't able to visually identify which of the amplifiers was driving his Dunlavy speakers even though they both remained in full sight. He was given a subsequent chance to repeat the experiment with an ABX switchbox the following day and again failed to reliably identify the same two amplifiers (both of which had remained accessible to him overnight.) This validates the technique and protocol and tells us that under even the most perfect of conditions (personal reference system, personally chosen programs, single listener with total control over every factor except visual identification, 'interloper' amplifier that would normally be as different as a personal reference as one could get) that "amplifier" sound doesn't really exist. Your *validation test* is like M. Scarpitti saying he listened to his amplifiers a second time and got the same results. What needs to validated is that your DBT doesn't get in the way of identifying subtle audible differences, particularly in more than one dimension (gross frequency response or loudness). It would appear that it *does* from all of the results I've seen. Regards, Mike |
#167
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
chung wrote :
Then prove it in a blind test. There is a pool of between 4 and 5 thousand dollars waiting to be collected by anyone who can do this. You may be interested to know that in the five years or so that it's been around, no one has even *tried* to collect it. "Frank O. Hodge" wrote: Good Lord, that much money riding on telling cables apart? Sooner or later I'd have to hit it. Well worth the necessary reiterative effort. Don't get too excitied about winning this money because it's not going to happen. I put in $500 myself. First DBTs with audio components and music aren't sensitive enough to show differences between amplifiers, much less cables. They obscure the subtle differences. And second, to hedge his bet, Pinkerton added the requirement the the cables in such a test have to measure withing 0.1db of each other. LOL. Regards, Mike |
#168
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#169
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Michael Scarpitti" wrote in message
news:81y1c.33527$ko6.326528@attbi_s02... "Norman Schwartz" wrote in message ... "Michael Scarpitti" wrote in message ... Stewart Pinkerton wrote in message news:w241c.28038$PR3.503763@attbi_s03... (snip) If you would like, go to an audio shop that carries used products of this kind, and ask to take them home. Hook them up to a set of Stax Lambdas through a transformer such as the SRD-7. Then you will hear the differences. Not necessarily, plus I've already pointed out that this is a *bad* method for comparing amps, since the load is not representative of normal operation. Since I actually DO use the amp to power the earspeakers, it is indeed a perfectly valid test, in fact the most important test. If it sounds bad with the Stax, I can't use it. You must understand listening over speakers is somewhat less useful, as the resolution is lower in speakers, and coloration of the room enters into it. If you want to know what an amp REALLY sounds like, connect it to a Stax transformer and earspeakers. How then different model Stax cast recordings differently. Even if Stax listening is a measure of how good or bad recordings might be (which in my experience does not reveal whole picture) different listeners are again have differing evaluations. (Perhaps I didn't pick up which model Stax you are using, I use the SRM 313 which drives my SR-303 and SR-X MarkIII simultaneously.) The Stax unit I use is driven directly by the power amp through a transformer, called SRD-7. The one you have has a power amp supplied by Stax. You chose what you want in a power amp, and the sonic character of the power amp is revealed quite clearly by this set-up. Here is a similar set-up: http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?...photoho sting and here is the SRD-7 by itself: http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?...ategory=32 74 If you click on the bottom picure, you can see the power amp taps. Perhaps I should be asking you a more important and meaningful question: In the time it requires to carefully unwire and re-wire two different amps (avoiding any "shorts") how is it possible to have the exact mental picture of their differing sound characteristics. Additionally the amps under test comparison cannot be called upon to put out anything near that used to drive most loudspeakers to any reasonably loud level. So what use is any headphone listening test? |
#170
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 4 Mar 2004 17:16:21 GMT, (Mkuller) wrote:
(Mkuller) wrote: Why not admit the fact that your application of the DBT *most likely* is fatally flawed. Stewart Pinkerton wrote: Because it's not a fact - and I can prove it. mkuller wrote: ...until a someone provides a *validation test* for open-ended audio component comparisons with music as the program - your strong beliefs are just speculation. Finally! That's just what we've all been waiting for - let's see your so-called *proof*. *Real proof* would convince all of us skeptics, that you and the other few objectivists are right and leave no doubt whatsover to anyone, finally ending the "endless debate". Show us what you got... Bruce Abrams wrote: Several months you were presented the results of a Swedish Audio Society (or similarly named audiophile group) paper detailing the results of a blind listening test of CD players. The results showed a statistically positive result in the participants being able to distinguish between certain of the players under test. You were asked to respond to those results in light of a "validation test" and failed to do so. Perhaps you'd like to now? In this particular test, one of the CD players was described as sounding "brighter" than the other; i.e. the differences were large enough in one single dimension that they could even be identified in an open-ended DBT with music as the source. Actually, it just means that the differences were real, and were identified using the most sensitive test available - DBT. No measure of the *scale* of the differences is possible from the comments. Please explain how one single example of a positive DBT could possibly *validate* the test in all audio component comparison applications - when the differences are not as large or are multi-dimensional (e.g. imaging). It appears that what you're looking for is a test which validates your sighted preconceptions in the absence of any actual difference in the physical soundfield. Alas, no such test exists. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#171
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Michael Scarpitti wrote:
To claim some psychological mechanism (as yet unexplained) is responsible staggers the imagination. Surely THAT is a far more 'extraordinary claim' than my modest claim: the amps sound different because they are different. I went through some of my posts last year and found one which was a response to one of yours. You said, in that post, that you could hear green CD pen changes, with no problem at all. Now do you believe that it is because there is physcial change to the sound (after application of the green pen on CD), or is the effect due to some psychological mechanism? What would Occam's rule say about your observation, given that the whole "green pen" idea started as a joke? Would the subjectivists among us give Mr. Scarpitti the benefit of the doubt and agree with him that indeed there was change in the sound? Or would they now start to ask for a more careful (dare I say controlled) listening test? Here's that post of Mr. Scarpitti's: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=g:...s3.newsguy.com |
#172
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#173
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#174
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
(Nousaine) wrote in message news:G6y1c.453075$I06.5123397@attbi_s01...
"Harry Lavo" ...snip to content..... Now Harry, how does the word "recommend" become "insist"? The insistance is that the test be a blind comparative a-b or a-b-x test rather than a serial, modadic, evaluative test that happens to be blind. Seems to me that the insistence comes from you. Nobody objects to a serial, modadic, evaluative blind test. You are the only person who "insists" a test that is this involved and requires months and multiple subjects, and have not bothered to do same yourself. When do we start? As far as I am concerned, you don't have to do any controlled testing. You can pick amps/cables based on whatever criteria. However, when you want to convince others that there is real, audible, difference between them, you should use controlled testing like DBT to make sure that expectation bias (and other stuff like mismatched levels) does not invalidate your listening tests. DBT is the standard methodology on difference detection for such a long time, that I don't see any reason why Michael would have problem with it. He may not have a problem with it. Other than to consider it a waste of time. But he certainly didn't expect to be told that he was wrong, wrong, wrong to have thought he heard different sound characteristics from the amps because he didn't do the test double blind. He might or might not have heard such characteristics...he was given no benefit of the doubt. Why should he have been given a 'benefit'? Those of us who have gone the extra mile (actually putting the question to our and others ears under bias controlled conditions) get no quarter from him (or you) about results. What difference is there between listening to two or more amps in succession about which I know nothing (other than their name) and listening to two or more amps in succession whose names I do not know? What you're suggesting is that merely knowing the names of these products -- and ONLY that -- will 'create' a whole sonic 'signature' for each! That's preposterous on its face. Remember, I knew nothing about any of these amps whatsoever, except what in one case: what I read in the Harmon-Kardon literature. If I were 'prone' to hear differences between them that may or may not have there (your claim), that same 'bias' (your term) should be equally present regardless of my 'knowledge' of which amp I was listening to. In other words, why should I be MORE 'biased' (your term) by the name 'PS Audio' than 'A'? |
#175
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 04 Mar 2004 04:12:19 GMT, "Frank O. Hodge"
wrote: Stewart Pinkerton wrote: Then prove it in a blind test. There is a pool of between 4 and 5 thousand dollars waiting to be collected by anyone who can do this. You may be interested to know that in the five years or so that it's been around, no one has even *tried* to collect it. Good Lord, that much money riding on telling cables apart? Sooner or later I'd have to hit it. Well worth the necessary reiterative effort. You do hit the nail neatly on the head, as it's certainly *possible* to toss 16 heads out of twenty tosses. However, the odds are pretty good that the coin was loaded, so we're happy to take that chance. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#176
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 3 Mar 2004 22:28:56 GMT, lcw999 wrote:
Understand, the listening scenario I suggested is not to imply I could pick out a wire by name brand...however, in the quiet listening space of my own audio system I can detect which cable fits best in that audio environment.. ..in the intial stages..the brand is not a factor. Naturally I would need to know that, should I desire to go to a vendor to purchase it. Grasp that the initial stage of this scenario is the important one...not attaching a vendor name to the wire. The problem with your scenario is that not one single person has yet been found who can actually tell the difference between two wires of very roughly equivalent LCR parameters, under blind conditions. As is well known, a healthy prize awaits the first person who can demonstrate this ability. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#177
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#178
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mkuller wrote:
chung wrote : Then prove it in a blind test. There is a pool of between 4 and 5 thousand dollars waiting to be collected by anyone who can do this. You may be interested to know that in the five years or so that it's been around, no one has even *tried* to collect it. "Frank O. Hodge" wrote: Good Lord, that much money riding on telling cables apart? Sooner or later I'd have to hit it. Well worth the necessary reiterative effort. Don't get too excitied about winning this money because it's not going to happen. I put in $500 myself. First DBTs with audio components and music aren't sensitive enough to show differences between amplifiers, much less cables. How have you *validated* that claim? They obscure the subtle differences. How have you *validated* that claim? And second, to hedge his bet, Pinkerton added the requirement the the cables in such a test have to measure within 0.1db of each other. LOL. Gosh, Mr. Kuller, are you saying that one can predict the sound of cables from this *spec*? I thought such measurements simply *couldn't* capture teh real sonic differences bettween components? My money says that cables which *do* measure to within 0.1 dB *have* been perceived as sounding different, by 'audiophiles'....but *won't* be when proper controls are instituted. -- -S. "They've got God on their side. All we've got is science and reason." -- Dawn Hulsey, Talent Director |
#179
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
chung wrote in message news:u3L1c.477230$na.1146724@attbi_s04...
Michael Scarpitti wrote: To claim some psychological mechanism (as yet unexplained) is responsible staggers the imagination. Surely THAT is a far more 'extraordinary claim' than my modest claim: the amps sound different because they are different. I went through some of my posts last year and found one which was a response to one of yours. You said, in that post, that you could hear green CD pen changes, with no problem at all. Correct. I can. It's subtle, but real. Audible with the Stax Lambda's. Now do you believe that it is because there is physcial change to the sound (after application of the green pen on CD), or is the effect due to some psychological mechanism? Some CD's were affected, some not. What would Occam's rule say about your observation, given that the whole "green pen" idea started as a joke? That regardless of that 'fact' the difference is real. Basically, the effect of the green pen is reduced hiss, no more, no less. Would the subjectivists among us give Mr. Scarpitti the benefit of the doubt and agree with him that indeed there was change in the sound? Or would they now start to ask for a more careful (dare I say controlled) listening test? |
#181
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 04 Mar 2004 19:02:50 GMT, chung wrote:
Michael Scarpitti wrote: To claim some psychological mechanism (as yet unexplained) is responsible staggers the imagination. Surely THAT is a far more 'extraordinary claim' than my modest claim: the amps sound different because they are different. I went through some of my posts last year and found one which was a response to one of yours. You said, in that post, that you could hear green CD pen changes, with no problem at all. Now do you believe that it is because there is physcial change to the sound (after application of the green pen on CD), or is the effect due to some psychological mechanism? What would Occam's rule say about your observation, given that the whole "green pen" idea started as a joke? Would the subjectivists among us give Mr. Scarpitti the benefit of the doubt and agree with him that indeed there was change in the sound? Or would they now start to ask for a more careful (dare I say controlled) listening test? Here's that post of Mr. Scarpitti's: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=g:...s3.newsguy.com As it happens, a very long time ago, before the scales fell from my eyes, a group of us actually did try a very carefully controlled experiment involving 6 CDs from the same batch of pressings of Dave Brubeck's 'Late Night Brubeck', played through Naim electronics into Epos ES11 speakers ( the shop demo system of the guy who owned the record store which naturally had lots of those discs). The 'green penned' discs sounded exactly the same as the untreated discs - although a couple of the original batch were rejected because for no known reason they did not sound the same as the other four. Scarpitti's claim is extraordinary at best. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#182
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 04 Mar 2004 18:35:15 GMT, (Mkuller) wrote:
chung wrote : Then prove it in a blind test. There is a pool of between 4 and 5 thousand dollars waiting to be collected by anyone who can do this. You may be interested to know that in the five years or so that it's been around, no one has even *tried* to collect it. "Frank O. Hodge" wrote: Good Lord, that much money riding on telling cables apart? Sooner or later I'd have to hit it. Well worth the necessary reiterative effort. Don't get too excitied about winning this money because it's not going to happen. I put in $500 myself. A wonderful confirmation of the depth of your belief, but has no other value. First DBTs with audio components and music aren't sensitive enough to show differences between amplifiers, much less cables. Well, that would be because there *are* no audible differences, whatever you might care to believe. That's why so many people were happy to contribute to the pot. They obscure the subtle differences. And second, to hedge his bet, Pinkerton added the requirement the the cables in such a test have to measure withing 0.1db of each other. LOL. This is a trivial requirement which will allow 50 cents a foot 12AWG 'zipcord' and $1,000 a foot Kimber Black Pearl into the same test with no extra components. Also any nominally competent amplifier. Are you claiming that they will therefore sound the same? -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#183
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 03 Mar 2004 20:56:09 GMT, chung wrote:
Harry Lavo wrote: Nor is it often possible when comparing amps, without a very expensive control box which may itself interfere with the speaker/amp/cable interaction. The "very expensive" control box simply contains a relay or a manual switch. If you are concerned that the relay/switch *must* add distortion, then simply do a control test to eliminate that fear. You can listen to the system with the control box bypassed or not bypassed, and see if you can detect any difference, blind, of course. Also remember that if there is any contribution at all (which there should not be if the control box is carefully designed), that contribution applies to all the amps. This is an old saw that gets dragged out every time the subjectivists are backed into a corner. It is however interesting to note that in perhaps the most notorious DBT, the so-called 'Sunshine Trials', the listener first tried simple cable substitution, and found that he could no longer hear the 'night and day' differences he had claimed, so he then switched to the ABX box because he felt it was *more* senitive due to the ability to fast-switch. Of course, he still failed to tell any differences. Still, at least he *tried* a blind test to discover the truth of the matter, he did not simply claim that it was *impossible* for him to be mistaken about what he heard in sighted tests..................... -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#184
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Nousaine" wrote in message
... (Mkuller) wrote: (Michael Scarpitti) wrote: If anyone says 'the fact that you knew which product you were listening to invalidates any audible evaluation you may have made' is ludicrous. Stewart Pinkerton wrote: No, it's a simple fact, easily supported by experiment in the case of subtle differences, such as among nominally competent amplifiers. Why are you so adamant in refusing to accept simple truths? Truth? It's your opinion stated as fact... I have never heard two amplifiers that sound the same - the greatest differences were between tubed and solid state amps - competent ones - and you deny those differences exist. Nope, your comparison method is faulty. The odds are that some of them did indeed sound different, but others did not. I can demonstrate a tube amp and a SS amp which sound obviously and vastly different to a room full of audiioophiles - and I won't actually have to change the connections for them to 'hear' the difference............. So what? Why will you not accept the plain fact that sighted comparisons are fatally flawed, and at least *try* it for yourself. What are you afraid of? Will your ego not admit even the possibility of error? Why not admit the fact that your application of the DBT *most likely* is fatally flawed. Will your ego not admit even the possibility of error? Of course it was consistent, when you *knew* which one was connected! It's called reinforcement, and any first-year psy student can explain it to you. This isn't new knowledge, nor is it even in dispute in medical circles, which is why double-blind testing is *always* used in medical research. Yes it used in medical and other research. But until a someone provides a *validation test* for open-ended audio component comparisons with music as the program - your strong beliefs are just speculation. The point is, it is simply not worth my time to converse with those who deny that such differences can be heard at all. Not denying anything of the sort, merely pointing out that your comparison method is fatally flawed. Try it again under blind conditions, and you'll find that many of those 'night and day' diferences magically disappear. Those that remain are *real* differences, and you will have achieved something. At the moment, you are sticking your fingers firmly in your ears................ Can you spell *v-a-l-i-d-a-t-i-o-n t-e-s-t*? Regards, Mike I've done the validation test on several occasions. One of the more well knowmn ones was conducted at a hi-fi store where the owner claimed to have been able to easily identify amplifiers in his reference system under even blind conditions. Turns out that he was unable to reliably identify his 10k+ monoblock amplifiers from a used $500 integrated amplifier with nothing more than a opague cloth draped over the terminals so he wasn't able to visually identify which of the amplifiers was driving his Dunlavy speakers even though they both remained in full sight. He was given a subsequent chance to repeat the experiment with an ABX switchbox the following day and again failed to reliably identify the same two amplifiers (both of which had remained accessible to him overnight.) This validates the technique and protocol and tells us that under even the most perfect of conditions (personal reference system, personally chosen programs, single listener with total control over every factor except visual identification, 'interloper' amplifier that would normally be as different as a personal reference as one could get) that "amplifier" sound doesn't really exist. Tom, you know darn well that if the technique itself interferes with normal musical ear-brain processing, the above anecdotal test doesn't "validate" anything. It simply is one case of the test showing a "null:" while sighted listening did not. If the test is valid, the result is valid. If the test is not valid, the result is not valid. It's as simple as that. And years of audiologist research into perceptual levels does not validate it for this purpose either, as has been discussed here many times. |
#185
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message
news:KvQ1c.44925$PR3.895219@attbi_s03... snip, not particularly relevant to following As it happens, a very long time ago, before the scales fell from my eyes, a group of us actually did try a very carefully controlled experiment involving 6 CDs from the same batch of pressings of Dave Brubeck's 'Late Night Brubeck', played through Naim electronics into Epos ES11 speakers ( the shop demo system of the guy who owned the record store which naturally had lots of those discs). The 'green penned' discs sounded exactly the same as the untreated discs - although a couple of the original batch were rejected because for no known reason they did not sound the same as the other four. Scarpitti's claim is extraordinary at best. Of course, no "social interaction" effect there, eh Stewart? |
#186
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#187
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message ...
Simply put a cloth over the connections of the active item under test, everything else you suggest below is satisfied; you just don't know what is connected when. The cloth can in no way change ability to do pattern recognition. With or without the cloth this remains a purely "simply use your ears" test. Ability to speculate about some maybe thing is not the same as you doing the test. The below is both a strawman and a red herring. It is your speculation, the burden of proof is on you, otherwise the long held testing approaches have nothing to undermine their continued use and the excellent track record they have to now displayed. "How about pattern recognition and hard-wired emotional responses, things that may be operation even below "thresholds of hearing" much like small signal recognition below noise level. Don't think pattern recognition has anything to do with it. How about "that sounds real" versus "something is wrong". Those are not responses to a single two-dimensional volume difference. Those are strong, recalled patterns that experience and live music associate with a cluster of related characteristics that together signals "sounds real" or "something wrong". Likewise the anomalies that result in a lack of rhythmic response versus the normal "toe tapping" to a rhythmic piece of music? None of this has been researched with regard to blind comparative test interference, versus monadic, evaluative testing and ordinary music listening. Until that is done, the scientific work on "thresholds" just doesn't amount to much." I think you misunderstand me. I have nothing against "blind"; I do have a lot against comparative and particularly abx, which is the test of choice here. I've already proposed a blind, monadic, evaluative test as a validating "bridge" between the double-blind abx or comparative ab test (better) and a monadic, evaluative sighted test. Your approach would allow that. But it does require a second person to set up, record the configuration, reward the responses. And the evaluative process would take me at minimum a copy of days. As a bachelor, that makes for a tough condition. Unfortunately, the quick-switch approach for amplifiers is requires special equipment and is cumbersome. And I am not much interested in cables. Tom's response in another post to "let's start" is the first positive response to my validation proposal, where I proposed he, I, and another person do all three tests to "shake out" the procedures. But unfortunately the sighted testing requires at least a dozen and a half or so "takers" in order to build an appropriate statistical base, and even that number is very low compared to the ideal (of a minimum 100). But it's a start. Perhaps we are getting somewhere. |
#188
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Norman Schwartz" wrote in message news:gQK1c.458979$I06.5174464@attbi_s01...
Perhaps I should be asking you a more important and meaningful question: In the time it requires to carefully unwire and re-wire two different amps (avoiding any "shorts") how is it possible to have the exact mental picture of their differing sound characteristics. I repeated the trials several times. Additionally the amps under test comparison cannot be called upon to put out anything near that used to drive most loudspeakers to any reasonably loud level. So what use is any headphone listening test? Huh? I would be using the selected amp with these headphones. I also connected them to and listened to the speakers, which showed similar, but less dramatic differences. |
#189
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#191
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#192
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 05 Mar 2004 02:17:58 GMT, "Harry Lavo"
wrote: "Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message news:KvQ1c.44925$PR3.895219@attbi_s03... snip, not particularly relevant to following As it happens, a very long time ago, before the scales fell from my eyes, a group of us actually did try a very carefully controlled experiment involving 6 CDs from the same batch of pressings of Dave Brubeck's 'Late Night Brubeck', played through Naim electronics into Epos ES11 speakers ( the shop demo system of the guy who owned the record store which naturally had lots of those discs). The 'green penned' discs sounded exactly the same as the untreated discs - although a couple of the original batch were rejected because for no known reason they did not sound the same as the other four. Scarpitti's claim is extraordinary at best. Of course, no "social interaction" effect there, eh Stewart? Of course not, since it was a double-blind test. Sorry, I should have made that clear. There were four listeners, one of whom was the store owner, and he set up the test precisely so that he could prove to us that the green pens he sold were effective. It was only much later that I discovered that the whole 'green pen' thing was a practical joke atarted by Jim Johnson. In point of fact, when you look at the science, there is no possible mechanism by which a green edge can possibly make a difference to CD replay. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#193
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
On Thu, 04 Mar 2004 18:35:15 GMT, (Mkuller) wrote: chung wrote : Then prove it in a blind test. There is a pool of between 4 and 5 thousand dollars waiting to be collected by anyone who can do this. You may be interested to know that in the five years or so that it's been around, no one has even *tried* to collect it. "Frank O. Hodge" wrote: Good Lord, that much money riding on telling cables apart? Sooner or later I'd have to hit it. Well worth the necessary reiterative effort. Don't get too excitied about winning this money because it's not going to happen. I put in $500 myself. A wonderful confirmation of the depth of your belief, but has no other value. [snip] It's got value of another $500 right in my pocket, that's what. Some $5000, for telling cables apart? Perhaps five cables, 60 seconds for each audition (because the differences will be subtle but obvious), 25 permutations, a couple of pots of coffee and associated breaks, and there's merely a light afternoon's work. All I infer is that I've got to guess them right, one time only, not that I've got to write a memo or any such thing. If one would include throwing a cloth over the subjects, or not, then, sure, that would double the work but for $5000 it would remain manageable for the afternoon. I'd endorse the check with a green CD pen. Not that I'm going to start coloring on my CDs with one. The children can try to do that by themselves. |
#194
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Stewart Pinkerton wrote in message news:KvQ1c.44925$PR3.895219@attbi_s03...
As it happens, a very long time ago, before the scales fell from my eyes, a group of us actually did try a very carefully controlled experiment involving 6 CDs from the same batch of pressings of Dave Brubeck's 'Late Night Brubeck', played through Naim electronics into Epos ES11 speakers ( the shop demo system of the guy who owned the record store which naturally had lots of those discs). The 'green penned' discs sounded exactly the same as the untreated discs - although a couple of the original batch were rejected because for no known reason they did not sound the same as the other four. Scarpitti's claim is extraordinary at best. The Stax Lambdas allow one to hear things that most transducers do not. What is 'extraordinary' is their clarity. With these devices, I can hear the difference on some CD's, with the green-pen treatment. |
#195
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Stewart Pinkerton wrote in message news:95L1c.42957$PR3.843082@attbi_s03...
Actually, Occam's Razor suggest that all nominally competent amplifiers do indeed sound the same. Question-begging. What is 'competent'? The ones that sound the same? In the light of many decades of psy research which shows that our perceptions aree very easily fooled, Occam's Razor also suggests that the simplest explanation for your claims is that the perceived differences existed only inside your skull. Of course, that may not be the case for every amplifier, but without a blind test, you'll never know for sure. ....and just HOW does the perception into which I am thus 'fooled' unfold itself in such explicit detail, that highs are rolled off on one amp, transients ring on another, and dynamic compression occurs on a third? How creative I must be to do this all in my head! And how consistent I must be to be able to reproduce these 'phenomena' precisely 4 months later, when after the amp I selected kept blowing up, and I repeated the auditions! Occam's razor does, in fact, support my interpretation much more than yours. The reason is that you must account for a rather complicated behavior for my mind to 'create', ex nihilo, 7 distinctly different sounds for 7 different amps, and be able to re-create these sonic 'signatures' exactly and repeatedly, and only when the amp in question is being listened to, without confusing them. It's easily accounted for, and can easily be explained to you by any 1st year psy student. Your refusal to accept this possibility can also be explained to you by any 1st year psy student........ Then do it. In detail, please. I want you to account for ALL of the phenomena I heard: the Bryston's bass-heaviness, the H-K's reticence, the Sony TA-N88B's extreme clarity. Explain away! What you're claiming, is that I 'invent' a sonic signature for the Harmon-Kardon, Hafler, 2 different Sony, PS Audio, Denon, and Bryston amps, and not only that, but also keep them consistent over a long period of time, and unconfused. Yup, ragazine reviewers do this all the time, re the 'airiness' of tube amps. the 'bass slam' of Krell amps, the 'inner detail' of SET amps, ets etc etc. This classification and reinforcement is something that we humans do all the time, which is why we must control for bias when performing listening tests. You forget I had no prior experience or opinion of these products. Tube amps DO sound different, because they add distortions that are different from transistor distortions. To claim some psychological mechanism (as yet unexplained) is responsible staggers the imagination. It has been explained to you ad nauseam. The mechanism underlying your denial can also be explained............ No, not even once. I want mechanisms that create a specific sound signature, nothing less, or else you offer nothing. Surely THAT is a far more 'extraordinary claim' than my modest claim: the amps sound different because they are different. Nope, because your methodology is *known* to be fatally flawed, and the flaw is easily proven. Then prove it. You cannot, of course. |
#196
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
(Nousaine)
So Harry; when are you going to 'validate' open testing sensitivity to acoustical difference without confounding factors? No one needs to *validate* open-ended observational listening because no one is claiming it is *perfect*, like you seem to claiming about your audio DBTs. It is prefereable, in our opinion, to risk a possible *false positive* in observational listening, rather than face the *certainty* of a false negative in a DBT when subtle differences are involved. Single and double blind tests are the vehicles that separate anecdote, wishful thinking, merchandising and even well intentioned common human bias from perceptual errors that assign acoustical cause to non-acoustical factors. When obvious 'differences' evaporate when nothing more than a cloth is placed over I/O terminals what would be the acoustical masking mechanism? If the "sound" was real then how can simple bias controls (not applied to the signal path) possibly mask them? The differences don't disappear until the listener is required to match the sound to an unknown 'X'. The decision-making brain functions appear to get in the way of recalling audible memory of subtle differences. In the 35 years of The Great Debate why hasn't any amp/wire advocate ever been able to produce a replicable experiment, free of known human bias mechanisms, that validates their claims? Because you required test obscures the differences. Your position seems to be simply arguing the extant results without bringing new data of interest to the table. If you have some evidence that the human tendency to report difference when given 2 identical stimuli then let's see if. If you have some evidence that humans do NOT confuse small differences in loudness with changes in quality why not share that with us, as well. If you have some evidence (other than anecdotes) that acoustical factors previously unknown affect human perception why not let us in on the secret? It is true that ".... years of audiologist research into perceptual levels does not validate it for this purpose either, as has been discussed here many times" because, IMO "this purpose" has no acoustical basis. There's nothing wrong with that but I'm wondering why the subjectivists just can't leave it at that. It would seem that if there were acoustical cause for amp/cable/tweak differences it would be impossible for any set of acoustically based bias controls to stop any given subject from "hearing" them. Just my guess. You and the few objectivists here seem to be denying the results of over 35 years of careful "observational listening results", published in every audio equipment review magazine. That's pretty extraordinary. Regards, Mike |
#197
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mkuller wrote:
the way of recalling audible memory of subtle differences. In the 35 years of The Great Debate why hasn't any amp/wire advocate ever been able to produce a replicable experiment, free of known human bias mechanisms, that validates their claims? Because you required test obscures the differences. Joy in repetition! You and the few objectivists here seem to be denying the results of over 35 years of careful "observational listening results", published in every audio equipment review magazine. That's pretty extraordinary. Not if the 'careful' listening tests, really weren't. And by scientific standards, they were *grossly* NOT careful. -- -S. "They've got God on their side. All we've got is science and reason." -- Dawn Hulsey, Talent Director |
#198
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#199
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
What validation test and results would prove that DBT is not working?
It sounds to me as if this an important piece of information in order to get this discussion any further. That is easy. One can insert something that will generate a *known subtle audible difference* into the random samples. If the listeners fail to reliably identify that difference the test isn't working. |
#200
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
S888Wheel wrote:
What validation test and results would prove that DBT is not working? It sounds to me as if this an important piece of information in order to get this discussion any further. That is easy. One can insert something that will generate a *known subtle audible difference* into the random samples. What's a *known subtle audible difference* that *hasn't* been determined by controlled comparison methods? Any examples you'd care to offer? -- -S. "They've got God on their side. All we've got is science and reason." -- Dawn Hulsey, Talent Director |