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#1
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This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website
I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. If a single person can detect a change reliably only 0.5% more often than by chance alone, controlled testing (including possible ABX) can absolutely be used to confirm that ability to a high degree of certainty. Absolutely. HOWEVER, if I wish to demonstrate THE PROBABLE ABSENCE a small difference (say 0.22/0.17) to a level of significance of .05 I require a very large sample. Moreover, if 32 People all find that they can identify a given change to a ..2 certainty level the whole group requires to be aggregated and requires to now allow the audibility of the suggested effect. However, if I insist that ALL 32 People show a .05 certainty level I could claim (and thius what is happening quite frequently) that no-one could hear the effect with any significant certainty, while I have in fact data that supports the position that the effect is audible. For those who have not studied Statistics and wish to get a reasonable idea of the position and why I will continue to insist on it are invited to consult the discussion previously published in Stereophile: The Highs & Lows of Double-Blind Testing Do not be alarmed by the source in a subjectivist audio magazine, I feel the discussion presented there is completely fair and allows both sides to represent their positions well. I leave it to the genteele reader to draw their own conclusions. Here just one quote I absolutely love: "When data are nonsignificant, one scientist may conclude that differences are inaudible, another may conclude that it is wiser to withhold judgment (because, for example, it is always possible that ancillary equipment used in the listening test masked otherwise audible differences), another may decide to issue challenges, and a fourth scientist may decide to have spare ribs for dinner. These four scientists, having decided what interpretation to make when listening data are nonsignificant, may be interested in the probability that their significance test will label data as nonsignificant when differences are audible, forcing them to make that interpretation rather than correctly conclude that differences are audible. For example: ..Scientist 1 wants to know the risk of concluding that differences are inaudible when differences are, in fact, audible. ..Scientist 2 wants to know the risk that he will withhold judgment when differences are, in fact, audible. ..Scientist 3 wants to know the risk that he will issue challenges when differences are, in fact, audible. ..Scientist 4 is beneath contempt because he is eating spare ribs while I am hungry and writing this damn letter!" You may go there by using the following: http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showt...1&goto=newpost |
#2
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"Michael McKelvy" wrote in message
ink.net This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. If a single person can detect a change reliably only 0.5% more often than by chance alone, controlled testing (including possible ABX) can absolutely be used to confirm that ability to a high degree of certainty. Absolutely. HOWEVER, if I wish to demonstrate THE PROBABLE ABSENCE a small difference (say 0.22/0.17) to a level of significance of .05 I require a very large sample. I really don't care about what people can't hear, I care about what people can hear and the experiences they go through in order to do that. As far as what people don't hear, the most important and meaningful results are obtained when people try to hear these vanishingly small differences for themselves. That's why the www.pcabx.com web site exists - for people to try to hear small differences for themselves. For example, as you may know, several of us have reliably heard small diffrences between good power amps. Knowing what we went through to accomplish that, and what we actually heard in terms of an audible difference, is the most personally important finding. Would I even spit in a bucket over the difference I heard? No way! |
#3
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"Michael McKelvy" wrote in message
link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
#4
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"John Atkinson" wrote in message
om "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . Except this isn't an artible about double-blind testing. It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing. |
#5
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"Sander deWaal" wrote in message
"Michael McKelvy" said: If a single person can detect a change reliably only 0.5% more often than by chance alone, controlled testing (including possible ABX) can absolutely be used to confirm that ability to a high degree of certainty. snip There's a guy in RATubes, who's totally freaked out, but has genial oneliners. One of them is: "Build an amp. Enjoy the music". The DBT viewpoint has long been: "Obtain a good amp by whaterver means and enjoy the music". |
#6
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
"John Atkinson" wrote in message om "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors: Correction: Except this isn't an article about double-blind testing. It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing. |
#7
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"Arny Krueger" said:
One of them is: "Build an amp. Enjoy the music". The DBT viewpoint has long been: "Obtain a good amp by whaterver means and enjoy the music". DIY has more to offer, and I don't mean just value for money . -- Sander deWaal "SOA of a KT88? Sufficient." |
#8
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"Sander deWaal" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" said: One of them is: "Build an amp. Enjoy the music". The DBT viewpoint has long been: "Obtain a good amp by whaterver means and enjoy the music". DIY has more to offer, and I don't mean just value for money . What's unclear about "By whatever means"? I would not presume to trash one man's preference for a commercial amp, or another man's preference for an amp he built himself. Either way, I've been there and done that, many times. |
#9
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"George M. Middius" wrote in message
The 'borg viewpoint is: "Music is un-suitable for testing, LOt"S. Odd that no such statement can be found in the google archives. Middius, might that be because you are lying, big time? |
#10
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . Except this isn't an artible about double-blind testing. It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing. It looks as if you didn't read it, Mr. Krueger. The meat of the reprint is an article by Les Leventhal, of the University of Manitoba's Psychology Department, based on his Audio Engineering Society paper, "How Conventional Statistical Analyses Can Prevent Finding Audible Differences In Listening Tests," Preprint 2275 (C-9), which had been presented at the 79th AES Convention in New York, October 1985 and later reprinted in the JAES, meaning it had passed peer review. In addition to Mr. Leventhal's contributions, the reprint included comments from myself and from J. Gordon Holt, as well as from Tom Nousaine, David Carlstrom, David Clark, and E. Brad Meyer. Are you seriously suggesting that none of us have a clue about the "basics of subjective testing"? John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
#11
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"John Atkinson" wrote in message
om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 .. Note that Atkinson quickly becomes totally confused and transfers my comment on a Stereophile article to an AES paper Except this isn't an artible about double-blind testing. It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing. It looks as if you didn't read it, Mr. Krueger. It looks to me like you are free-associating, Mr. Atkinson. The meat of the reprint is an article by Les Leventhal, of the University of Manitoba's Psychology Department, It's true that your article contains very little meat Atkinson, and what little meat it does contain was not written by you. based on his Audio Engineering Society paper, "How Conventional Statistical Analyses Can Prevent Finding Audible Differences In Listening Tests," Preprint 2275 (C-9), which had been presented at the 79th AES Convention in New York, October 1985 and later reprinted in the JAES, meaning it had passed peer review. My comments also seem apply to Levinthal's paper, as the subsequent disembowelments of it in the JAES (cited below) show quite clearly. Leventhal's little rant passed peer review just long enough for subsequent disembowelment. BTW Atkinson, you left out the two published corrections/partial retractions by Levinthal. Then there are the subsequent JAES papers that disemboweled Leventhal's papers: Comments on "Type 1 and Type 2 Errors in the Statistical Analysis of Listening Tests" and Author's Replies 674942 bytes (CD aes4) Author(s): Shanefield, Daniel; Clark, David; Nousaine, Tom; Leventhal, Les Publication: Volume 35 Number 7/8 pp. 567·572; July 1987 Transformed Binomial Confidence Limits for Listening Tests 468821 bytes (CD aes5) Author(s): Burstein, Herman Publication: Volume 37 Number 5 pp. 363·367; May 1989 Abstract: A simple transformation of classical binomial confidence limits provides exact confidence limits for the results of a listening test, such as the popular ABX test. These limits are for the proportion of known correct responses, as distinguished from guessed correct responses. Similarly, a point estimate is obtained for the proportion of known correct responses. The transformed binomial limits differ, often markedly, from those obtained by the Bayesian method. Approximation Formulas for Error Risk and Sample Size in ABX Testing 442116 bytes (CD aes4) Author(s): Burstein, Herman Publication: Volume 36 Number 11 pp. 879·883; November 1988 Abstract: When sampling from a dichotomous population with an assumed proportion p of events having a defined characteristic, the binomial distribution is the appropriate statistical model for accurately determining: type 1 error risk (symbol); type 2 error risk (symbol); sample size n based on specified (symbol) and (symbol) and assumptions about p; and critical c (minimum number of events to satisfy a specified [symbol]). Table 3 in [1] pre;sents such data for a limited number of sample sizes and p values. To extend the scope of Table 3 to most n and p, we present approximation formulas of substantial accuracy, based on the normal distribution as an approximation of the binomial. In addition to Mr. Leventhal's contributions, the reprint included comments from myself and from J. Gordon Holt, as well as from Tom Nousaine, David Carlstrom, David Clark, and E. Brad Meyer. Inability to distinguish between the Stereophile article I mentioned, and an AES paper I didn't mention noted. Are you seriously suggesting that none of us have a clue about the "basics of subjective testing"? Since "the none of us"were from an AES paper I wasn't commenting on, I'm not commenting on them. Are you totally confused or what, Atkinson? Why are you so hot to cite a paper that was subsequently debunked so thoroughly? |
#12
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On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 12:50:14 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors: As do you, of course. |
#13
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dave weil said:
Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors: As do you, of course. According to Arny-logic, he would be an Atkinson supporter as well as a "normal" (note quotation marks as to not confuse Arny any further). Who said a negative can't be proven? ;-) -- Sander deWaal "SOA of a KT88? Sufficient." |
#14
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 Note that Atkinson quickly becomes totally confused and transfers my comment on a Stereophile article to an AES paper As I said, Mr. Krueger, you didn't appear to read the article at the link I gave, which includes a summarized version of the text of Professor Leventhal's AES paper. That's why I pointed this out to you. Except this isn't an artible about double-blind testing. It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing. It looks as if you didn't read it, Mr. Krueger... snip of Mr. Kruger's opinoions of the Leventhal AES paper, which I am sure he believes to be true but are irrelevant to the specific point I was making In addition to Mr. Leventhal's contributions, the reprint included comments from myself and from J. Gordon Holt, as well as from Tom Nousaine, David Carlstrom, David Clark, and E. Brad Meyer. Inability to distinguish between the Stereophile article I mentioned, and an AES paper I didn't mention noted. As I pointed out, the article and the AES paper are essentially the same. However, the Stsreophile article includes comments form several authors, not just Leventhal, which you would have known had you read past the first page. :-) Are you seriously suggesting that none of us have a clue about the "basics of subjective testing"? Since "the none of us" were from an AES paper I wasn't commenting on, I'm not commenting on them. The authors mentioned contributed to the Stereophile article to which you were referring, not the AES paper that was also summarized in the article. So it is fair to assume that your comment "It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing" refers to me, to Gordon Holt, to Les Leventhal, and to Tom Nousaine, David Carlstrom, David Clark, and E. Brad Meyer, all of whom contribued to the Stereophile reprint to which you were referring. As I said, had you actually read past the first page of the article at http://www.stereophile.com/features/141, you would have known this. As it now stands, you are on record as stating that your associates Tom Nousaine, David Clark, and David Carlstrom "are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing." :-) I am sure they will explain to you that you are wrong about this. :-) John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
#15
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In article ,
dave weil wrote: On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 12:50:14 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors: As do you, of course. And provides further evidence for the proposition that any commentary on spelling will itself contain a typo. Stephen |
#16
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![]() "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile John, Good article. I've subscribed now for a year, and IMHO, the magazine has lost it's spice. It's still a good magazine, but, IMHO, a bit too much "The Village of the Happy Nice People." Magnets for controversy do better in the long term. |
#17
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"MINe 109" wrote in message
In article , dave weil wrote: On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 12:50:14 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors: As do you, of course. And provides further evidence for the proposition that any commentary on spelling will itself contain a typo. Thanks for behaving so "Normally" Stephen. |
#18
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"John Atkinson" wrote in message
om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 Note that Atkinson quickly becomes totally confused and transfers my comment on a Stereophile article to an AES paper As I said, Mr. Krueger, you didn't appear to read the article at the link I gave, which includes a summarized version of the text of Professor Leventhal's AES paper. That's why I pointed this out to you. Except this isn't an artible about double-blind testing. It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing. It looks as if you didn't read it, Mr. Krueger... snip of Mr. Kruger's opinoions of the Leventhal AES paper, which I am sure he believes to be true but are irrelevant to the specific point I was making Snip Atkinson's gratuitous snippage on the grounds of egregious snippage. |
#19
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
"John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile John, Good article. It's a biased misleading POS designed to appeal to people who want to believe in magic, not science. |
#20
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On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 05:08:52 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "Robert Morein" wrote in message "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile John, Good article. It's a biased misleading POS designed to appeal to people who want to believe in magic, not science. From the article: The ABX Comparator system, which I helped develop, has been refined during the 10 years of its existence by the suggestions of many audiophiles and scientists. Some hardware improvements of this system can even be traced to the pages of this magazine (Vol.5 No.5). Other inputs have resulted in the development of double-blind listening tests which require no switching. The reason for perfecting listening tests is to develop the ability to hear sonic improvements when they exist as sound, rather than as mere claims. To quote the esteemed J. Gordon Holt on the subject of double-blind testing, "The losers will be the dissemblers, the frauds, and those skilled in the art of autohype. The winners, ultimately, will be music and the rest of us who are interested in the maximal fidelity of reproduced music."—David Clark -------------------- Does Mr. Clark now consider you a turncoat, since you've in essence called him a POS? Then of course, there's this bit of POS: "The human brain is best at making sense out of nonsense. Humans tend to find differences and distinctions whether they exist or not. The research of Richard M. Warren, Diana Deutsch, and others, confirms that humans can decipher a word obscured by noise as much as a minute after a sentence was spoken (footnote 8). This same potential can, at times, create the wrong word. We can misunderstand and still believe firmly we heard a word different than the one spoken. This is not a defect. It allowed our ancestors to survive by detecting threats through noise. Sometimes they overreacted and called out defences when no mastodon approached. This did no harm". --------------------- Totally absurd, innit, Arnold? Taling about prehistoric mammals and all. What does *that* have to do with audio? Plus, everyone knows how short the auditory memory is. Who does this guy think he is, going against conventional wisdom like that? Once again, RAO should applaud you for alerting it to the horribly misleading POS that Mr. Atkinson has attempted to foist upon it. |
#21
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"dave weil" wrote in message
On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 05:08:52 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Robert Morein" wrote in message "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile John, Good article. It's a biased misleading POS designed to appeal to people who want to believe in magic, not science. From the article: The ABX Comparator system, which I helped develop, has been refined during the 10 years of its existence by the suggestions of many audiophiles and scientists. Some hardware improvements of this system can even be traced to the pages of this magazine (Vol.5 No.5). Other inputs have resulted in the development of double-blind listening tests which require no switching. The reason for perfecting listening tests is to develop the ability to hear sonic improvements when they exist as sound, rather than as mere claims. To quote the esteemed J. Gordon Holt on the subject of double-blind testing, "The losers will be the dissemblers, the frauds, and those skilled in the art of autohype. The winners, ultimately, will be music and the rest of us who are interested in the maximal fidelity of reproduced music."-David Clark -------------------- Does Mr. Clark now consider you a turncoat, since you've in essence called him a POS? The logical flaw here is that the presence of one or even a few true facts and well-considered opinions in an article does not prevent the entire article from still being on balance, a POS. I suspect that Weil would be able to detect this flaw in someone else's writing, but being highly challenged in the self-awareness department, he missed this critical point in his own writing. Note that neither Weil nor Atkinson quoted the following paragraph from the Stereophile aritcle on RAO: "Les Leventhal's critique of the statistical analysis commonly used in blind subjective testing is misleading, erroneous, and borders on the incompetent. His letter is written in a style that prompts the casual reader to think "Someone has finally figured out what's wrong with all those blind tests where they don't hear anything." Not only has Leventhal failed to prove his case; he has demonstrated his own lack of understanding of how the audiophile benefits from double-blind testing. " Dave was being a gentleman at this point and didn't call Leventhal's weirdness a POS. But he pretty well communicated the same basic idea. Apparently, the absence of a snapply comeback from Atkinson means that he reread page 5 of his own article. |
#22
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On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 07:28:56 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 05:08:52 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Robert Morein" wrote in message "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile John, Good article. It's a biased misleading POS designed to appeal to people who want to believe in magic, not science. From the article: The ABX Comparator system, which I helped develop, has been refined during the 10 years of its existence by the suggestions of many audiophiles and scientists. Some hardware improvements of this system can even be traced to the pages of this magazine (Vol.5 No.5). Other inputs have resulted in the development of double-blind listening tests which require no switching. The reason for perfecting listening tests is to develop the ability to hear sonic improvements when they exist as sound, rather than as mere claims. To quote the esteemed J. Gordon Holt on the subject of double-blind testing, "The losers will be the dissemblers, the frauds, and those skilled in the art of autohype. The winners, ultimately, will be music and the rest of us who are interested in the maximal fidelity of reproduced music."-David Clark -------------------- Does Mr. Clark now consider you a turncoat, since you've in essence called him a POS? The logical flaw here is that the presence of one or even a few true facts and well-considered opinions in an article does not prevent the entire article from still being on balance, a POS. I suspect that Weil would be able to detect this flaw in someone else's writing, but being highly challenged in the self-awareness department, he missed this critical point in his own writing. Sorry Charlie, you've missed the boat again. Just like you did on the PA issue...you know, the one that I scared you off of. Note that neither Weil nor Atkinson quoted the following paragraph from the Stereophile aritcle on RAO: "Les Leventhal's critique of the statistical analysis commonly used in blind subjective testing is misleading, erroneous, and borders on the incompetent. His letter is written in a style that prompts the casual reader to think "Someone has finally figured out what's wrong with all those blind tests where they don't hear anything." Not only has Leventhal failed to prove his case; he has demonstrated his own lack of understanding of how the audiophile benefits from double-blind testing. " Dave was being a gentleman at this point and didn't call Leventhal's weirdness a POS. But he pretty well communicated the same basic idea. Well, he didn't show *how* it was "misleading, erroneous and borders on the incompetent". Anyone can say anything they want but it doesn't make it true. Apparently, the absence of a snapply comeback from Atkinson means that he reread page 5 of his own article. Ahhhh, as I suspected, a typical Sunday morning for Arnold. Sitting at the ready by the computer terminal, waiting to pounce. Frankly, I find that odd for such a religious person that he has to get wound up for church by engaging in battle on RAO. But it's almost like clockwork. |
#23
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"dave weil" wrote in message
On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 07:28:56 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 05:08:52 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Robert Morein" wrote in message "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. You didn't include the link to the Stereophile article on double-blind testing. It is http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile John, Good article. It's a biased misleading POS designed to appeal to people who want to believe in magic, not science. From the article: The ABX Comparator system, which I helped develop, has been refined during the 10 years of its existence by the suggestions of many audiophiles and scientists. Some hardware improvements of this system can even be traced to the pages of this magazine (Vol.5 No.5). Other inputs have resulted in the development of double-blind listening tests which require no switching. The reason for perfecting listening tests is to develop the ability to hear sonic improvements when they exist as sound, rather than as mere claims. To quote the esteemed J. Gordon Holt on the subject of double-blind testing, "The losers will be the dissemblers, the frauds, and those skilled in the art of autohype. The winners, ultimately, will be music and the rest of us who are interested in the maximal fidelity of reproduced music."-David Clark -------------------- Does Mr. Clark now consider you a turncoat, since you've in essence called him a POS? The logical flaw here is that the presence of one or even a few true facts and well-considered opinions in an article does not prevent the entire article from still being on balance, a POS. I suspect that Weil would be able to detect this flaw in someone else's writing, but being highly challenged in the self-awareness department, he missed this critical point in his own writing. Sorry Charlie, you've missed the boat again. Just like you did on the PA issue...you know, the one that I scared you off of. Note that neither Weil nor Atkinson quoted the following paragraph from the Stereophile aritcle on RAO: "Les Leventhal's critique of the statistical analysis commonly used in blind subjective testing is misleading, erroneous, and borders on the incompetent. His letter is written in a style that prompts the casual reader to think "Someone has finally figured out what's wrong with all those blind tests where they don't hear anything." Not only has Leventhal failed to prove his case; he has demonstrated his own lack of understanding of how the audiophile benefits from double-blind testing. " Dave was being a gentleman at this point and didn't call Leventhal's weirdness a POS. But he pretty well communicated the same basic idea. Well, he didn't show *how* it was "misleading, erroneous and borders on the incompetent". Anyone can say anything they want but it doesn't make it true. There was no editing of what Clark submitted to Stereophile, is that what you want us to believe? Noted - Weil's iability to follow up on highly relevant refereed technical papers whose abstracts were recently posted on RAO. Bottom line - Weil is trying to create the impression that Lenventhal's weirdness was never effectively rebutted, based solely his reading of a Stereophile article. What really happened is that the AES saw through Leventhal's weirdness almost instantly. They published his paper to avoid claims that they had whitewashed the issue. Then had their best folks, but folks not directly connected with Clark, do the right and honest thing with it. Good show! Apparently, the absence of a snapply comeback from Atkinson means that he reread page 5 of his own article. Ahhhh, as I suspected, a typical Sunday morning for Arnold. Sitting at the ready by the computer terminal, waiting to pounce. Frankly, I find that odd for such a religious person that he has to get wound up for church by engaging in battle on RAO. But it's almost like clockwork. IOW, Weil has nothing to respond with but his usual posturing and BS. He knows that he's been nailed again, and is well into the obligatory RAO Normals pity party. |
#24
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In article ,
"Arny Krueger" wrote: "MINe 109" wrote in message In article , dave weil wrote: On Sat, 4 Sep 2004 12:50:14 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors: As do you, of course. And provides further evidence for the proposition that any commentary on spelling will itself contain a typo. Thanks for behaving so "Normally" Stephen. And who was the last person I caught at this 'offence'? Me. Stephen |
#25
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "dave weil" wrote in message On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 07:28:56 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 05:08:52 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Robert Morein" wrote in message "John Atkinson" wrote in message om... "Michael McKelvy" wrote in message link.net... This is excerpted from a thread on the diyaudio.com website I thought Arny might wish to weigh in either here or there on the matter. [snip] Ahhhh, as I suspected, a typical Sunday morning for Arnold. Sitting at the ready by the computer terminal, waiting to pounce. Frankly, I find that odd for such a religious person that he has to get wound up for church by engaging in battle on RAO. But it's almost like clockwork. IOW, Weil has nothing to respond with but his usual posturing and BS. He knows that he's been nailed again, and is well into the obligatory RAO Normals pity party. Dave, Arny's church meets Saturday at midnight in the church basement. The crosses are turned upside down. Arny's just coming off a binge. |
#26
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I particularly enjoyed this Krueger piece, since the cogency far exceeds
anything I've read by him: "If ironies could kill little by little, go order a diet! Just nibbling throughout a ball behind the corner is too new for Roberta to mould it. Except this isn't an artible about double-blind testing. Just now Varla will fear the boat, and if Ronnie annually calls it too, the shopkeeper will live before the fresh navel. He should creep eerily, unless Catherine talks tailors on Jadallah's twig. If the kind pens can kill furiously, the short coffee may solve more oceans. Her code was fat, urban, and cleans between the evening. Sometimes, Osama never recommends until Said departs the polite goldsmith stupidly. Tell Ghassan it's heavy improving beneath a sighted listening test. Will you kick behind the spring, if Ronnie wrongly tastes the sticker? Plenty of caps will be young weak frogs. Frederic, between tyrants angry and pretty, behaves without it, arriving weekly." "Atkinson's gratuitous snippage on the grounds of egregious snippage smells a plate too think to her bad hallway. How doesn't Middius irrigate bimonthly? They are helping in front of weird, near long, among wide speaker placement. Otherwise the yogi in Gul's player might lift some sweet pickles." "It looks to me like you are free-associating, Mr. Atkinson. A lot of tags virtually move the lean canyon. Who does Gul expect so wistfully, whenever Frederic irritates the shallow teacher very smartly? I was seeking to grasp you some of my distant dogs." "For Middius the can's sick, before me it's durable, whereas in back of you it's recollecting worthwhile. The outer ache rarely burns Dave, it opens Carte Blanche instead. Estefana's pumpkin pulls throughout our game with a hum problem. Are you totally confused or what, Atkinson? Why are you so hot to cite a paper that was subsequently debunked so thoroughly? More complex crossover networks are not unusual with higher quality speakers." "There was no editing of what Clark submitted to Stereophile, is that what you want us to believe? He'll be answering above filthy Ikram until his smog walks halfheartedly. ****ing don't explain the dusts mercilessly, sow them regularly. Until Martin measures the pins tamely, Samuel won't jump any inner mirrors. Other closed ugly enigmas will scold eventually beneath raindrops. Weil is trying to create the impression that Lenventhal's weirdness was never effectively rebutted, based solely his reading of a Stereophile article. To be noisy or strange will fill rural exits to hatefully look. What really happened is that the AES saw through Leventhal's weirdness almost instantly. She wants to laugh sour tapes around Francoise's desert. Some units receive, promise, and change. Others sadly cover. Almost no dark blank trees will inadvertently excuse the cars. He might pour simply if Daoud's walnut isn't quiet. The puddles, jars, and counters are all good and wet. It might truly attempt above Abdul when the bizarre jugs care without the empty lake. Almost no upper tickets are cheap and other stupid grocers are dry, but will George reject that? She should wander once, learn absolutely, then dream over the porter below the doorway. Abu dines the farmer in front of hers and neatly plays. Let's dye at the tired lights, but don't converse the smart oranges. She'd rather cook incredibly than shout with Abdel's cosmetic shirt. A lot of humble light cup judges candles throughout Candy's solid ointment. He knows that he's been nailed again, and is well into the obligatory RAO Normals pity party." "What's unclear about "By whatever means"? It helped, you irrigated, yet Vincent never seemingly conversed in the barn. We clean them, then we nearly comb Jbilou and Beth's rich lemon. Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors we pour the full egg. Get your surprisingly cooking barber about my bathroom. When did Hala dream beside all the kettles? We can't improve floors unless Youssef will usably dine afterwards." "It's really true confessions and misapprehensions of people who are pretty clueless about even the basics of subjective testing. All dirty weaver or moon, and she'll lazily call everybody. Who tastes grudgingly, when Salahuddin recommends the lower potter before the ceiling? You won't believe me laughing around your clean market. If you will care Vincent's swamp in back of cases, it will hourly expect the coconut. It's very healthy today, I'll judge wickedly or Felix will irritate the cards. While poultices steadily mould bushs, the carpenters often solve outside the open hens. She will nibble the elder ulcer and shout it alongside its winter. Plenty of hollow papers learn Satam, and they loudly grasp Mustapha too." "Thanks for behaving so "Normally" Stephen. Plenty of lost blunt lentils badly move as the clever spoons creep. Leventhal's little rant passed peer review just long enough for subsequent disembowelment.We sneakily depart through hot strong drawers." Are you totally confused or what, Atkinson? Why are you so hot to cite a paper that was subsequently debunked so thoroughly? As strangely as Madeleine looks, you can scold the bowl much more frantically. Middius, might that be because you are lying, big time? Occasionally, envelopes hate over sad ventilators, unless they're younger. Who Catherine's rude cobbler wastes, Tim attempts behind sticky, unique signals. Mel, still covering, smells almost fully, as the jacket excuses inside their sauce. Both arriving now, Ghassan and Grover received the lazy foothills below difficult hat. I was opening buckets to handsome Walt, who's wandering outside the painter's shower. They are seeking alongside the lane now, won't fill shoes later. Are you empty, I mean, kicking outside dirty powders? Either way, I've been there and done that, many times. |
#27
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
news ![]() "If ironies could kill little by little, go order a diet! Just nibbling throughout a ball behind the corner is too new for Roberta to mould it. Except this isn't an artible about double-blind testing. Just now Varla will fear the boat, and if Ronnie annually calls it too, the shopkeeper will live before the fresh navel. He should creep eerily, unless Catherine talks tailors on Jadallah's twig. If the kind pens can kill furiously, the short coffee may solve more oceans. Her code was fat, urban, and cleans between the evening. Sometimes, Osama never recommends until Said departs the polite goldsmith stupidly. Tell Ghassan it's heavy improving beneath a sighted listening test. Will you kick behind the spring, if Ronnie wrongly tastes the sticker? Plenty of caps will be young weak frogs. Frederic, between tyrants angry and pretty, behaves without it, arriving weekly." "For Middius the can's sick, before me it's durable, whereas in back of you it's recollecting worthwhile. The outer ache rarely burns Dave, it opens Carte Blanche instead. Estefana's pumpkin pulls throughout our game with a hum problem. Are you totally confused or what, Atkinson? Why are you so hot to cite a paper that was subsequently debunked so thoroughly? More complex crossover networks are not unusual with higher quality speakers." He'll be answering above filthy Ikram until his smog walks halfheartedly. ****ing don't explain the dusts mercilessly, sow them regularly. Until Martin measures the pins tamely, Samuel won't jump any inner mirrors. Other closed ugly enigmas will scold eventually beneath raindrops. Weil is trying to create the impression that Lenventhal's weirdness was never effectively rebutted, based solely his reading of a Stereophile article. To be noisy or strange will fill rural exits to hatefully look. What really happened is that the AES saw through Leventhal's weirdness almost instantly. She wants to laugh sour tapes around Francoise's desert. Some units receive, promise, and change. Others sadly cover. Almost no dark blank trees will inadvertently excuse the cars. He might pour simply if Daoud's walnut isn't quiet. The puddles, jars, and counters are all good and wet. It might truly attempt above Abdul when the bizarre jugs care without the empty lake. Almost no upper tickets are cheap and other stupid grocers are dry, but will George reject that? She should wander once, learn absolutely, then dream over the porter below the doorway. Abu dines the farmer in front of hers and neatly plays. Let's dye at the tired lights, but don't converse the smart oranges. She'd rather cook incredibly than shout with Abdel's cosmetic shirt. A lot of humble light cup judges candles throughout Candy's solid ointment. He knows that he's been nailed again, and is well into the obligatory RAO Normals pity party." It helped, you irrigated, yet Vincent never seemingly conversed in the barn. We clean them, then we nearly comb Jbilou and Beth's rich lemon. Since the normals who support Atkinson love to make a big point out of trivail spelling errors we pour the full egg. Get your surprisingly cooking barber about my bathroom. When did Hala dream beside all the kettles? We can't improve floors unless Youssef will usably dine afterwards." All dirty weaver or moon, and she'll lazily call everybody. Who tastes grudgingly, when Salahuddin recommends the lower potter before the ceiling? You won't believe me laughing around your clean market. If you will care Vincent's swamp in back of cases, it will hourly expect the coconut. It's very healthy today, I'll judge wickedly or Felix will irritate the cards. While poultices steadily mould bushs, the carpenters often solve outside the open hens. She will nibble the elder ulcer and shout it alongside its winter. Plenty of hollow papers learn Satam, and they loudly grasp Mustapha too." Plenty of lost blunt lentils badly move as the clever spoons creep. Leventhal's little rant passed peer review just long enough for subsequent disembowelment.We sneakily depart through hot strong drawers." As strangely as Madeleine looks, you can scold the bowl much more frantically. Middius, might that be because you are lying, big time? Occasionally, envelopes hate over sad ventilators, unless they're younger. Who Catherine's rude cobbler wastes, Tim attempts behind sticky, unique signals. Mel, still covering, smells almost fully, as the jacket excuses inside their sauce. Both arriving now, Ghassan and Grover received the lazy foothills below difficult hat. I was opening buckets to handsome Walt, who's wandering outside the painter's shower. They are seeking alongside the lane now, won't fill shoes later. Are you empty, I mean, kicking outside dirty powders? Either way, I've been there and done that, many times. Easily one of the more lucid items you've ever posted here, Moron. Keep up the good work and maybe they'll give you that PhD after all. |
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"Arny Krueger" said:
Easily one of the more lucid items you've ever posted here, Moron. Keep up the good work and maybe they'll give you that PhD after all. "Name-calling seems to be about your maximum level of intellectual discussion, Sander. " -Arny Krueger, RAO, 4/9/2004. Nice job, Arny. -- Sander deWaal "SOA of a KT88? Sufficient." |
#29
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"Sander deWaal" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" said: Easily one of the more lucid items you've ever posted here, Moron. Keep up the good work and maybe they'll give you that PhD after all. "Name-calling seems to be about your maximum level of intellectual discussion, Sander. " -Arny Krueger, RAO, 4/9/2004. Nice job, Arny. Just like you Normals to make a big fuss over a simple typo.... |
#30
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"Arny Krueger" said:
"Sander deWaal" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" said: Easily one of the more lucid items you've ever posted here, Moron. Keep up the good work and maybe they'll give you that PhD after all. "Name-calling seems to be about your maximum level of intellectual discussion, Sander. " -Arny Krueger, RAO, 4/9/2004. Nice job, Arny. Just like you Normals to make a big fuss over a simple typo.... "Middius made me do it? " Lame, Arny. -- Sander deWaal "SOA of a KT88? Sufficient." |
#31
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... "dave weil" wrote in message On Sun, 5 Sep 2004 07:28:56 -0400, "Arny Krueger" wrote about the article at http://www.stereophile.com/features/141 . Dave was being a gentleman at this point and didn't call Leventhal's weirdness a POS. But he pretty well communicated the same basic idea. Well, he didn't show *how* it was "misleading, erroneous and borders on the incompetent". Anyone can say anything they want but it doesn't make it true. There was no editing of what Clark submitted to Stereophile, is that what you want us to believe? For the record, there was no editing of David Clark's contribution to this article, other than to correct spelling and syntax, as appopriate. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
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Arny:
At the time the Stereophile article was written or at any point since, has Dave Clark had any financial in ABX devices? |
#33
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"Michael McKelvy" wrote in message
ink.net At the time the Stereophile article was written or at any point since, has Dave Clark had any financial (interest) in ABX devices? Good question. I don't remember if we had sold ABX by 1985 or not. That's when his financial interest in ABX ended. |
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ludovic mirabel wrote:
My dear Ludo, At *THIS* point on *THIS* newgroup, nobody really cares about DBT... Do you remember the song from Otis Redding : "Sitting on the dock of the bay Watching the tide roll away I'm just sitting on the dock of the bay Wasting time" Are you sure that you are loving to "waste time" ? :-/ Do you sincerely think that there's a place *HERE* to discuss such 'marginal' (lol) experiences ? |
#36
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"Lionel" wrote in message
ludovic mirabel wrote: My dear Ludo, At *THIS* point on *THIS* newgroup, nobody really cares about DBT... Do you remember the song from Otis Redding : "Sitting on the dock of the bay Watching the tide roll away I'm just sitting on the dock of the bay Wasting time" Are you sure that you are loving to "waste time" ? :-/ Do you sincerely think that there's a place *HERE* to discuss such 'marginal' (lol) experiences ? Actually responding to a Ludovic Mirabel post about DBT *IS* just a waste of time. |
#37
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Lionel" wrote in message ludovic mirabel wrote: My dear Ludo, At *THIS* point on *THIS* newgroup, nobody really cares about DBT... Do you remember the song from Otis Redding : "Sitting on the dock of the bay Watching the tide roll away I'm just sitting on the dock of the bay Wasting time" Are you sure that you are loving to "waste time" ? :-/ Do you sincerely think that there's a place *HERE* to discuss such 'marginal' (lol) experiences ? Actually responding to a Ludovic Mirabel post about DBT *IS* just a waste of time. No problem for me Arnold. You should know... |
#38
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"Lionel" wrote in message
Arny Krueger wrote: "Lionel" wrote in message ludovic mirabel wrote: My dear Ludo, At *THIS* point on *THIS* newgroup, nobody really cares about DBT... Do you remember the song from Otis Redding : "Sitting on the dock of the bay Watching the tide roll away I'm just sitting on the dock of the bay Wasting time" Are you sure that you are loving to "waste time" ? :-/ Do you sincerely think that there's a place *HERE* to discuss such 'marginal' (lol) experiences ? Actually responding to a Ludovic Mirabel post about DBT *IS* just a waste of time. No problem for me Arnold. You should know... I'm not casting stones... just stating that which is obvious for regulars, but perhaps not newbies. |
#39
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Lionel" wrote in message Arny Krueger wrote: "Lionel" wrote in message ludovic mirabel wrote: My dear Ludo, At *THIS* point on *THIS* newgroup, nobody really cares about DBT... Do you remember the song from Otis Redding : "Sitting on the dock of the bay Watching the tide roll away I'm just sitting on the dock of the bay Wasting time" Are you sure that you are loving to "waste time" ? :-/ Do you sincerely think that there's a place *HERE* to discuss such 'marginal' (lol) experiences ? Actually responding to a Ludovic Mirabel post about DBT *IS* just a waste of time. No problem for me Arnold. You should know... I'm not casting stones... just stating that which is obvious for regulars, but perhaps not newbies. Good... ;-) Note, this doesn't mean that I am not curious. :O) |
#40
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On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 17:45:11 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
Actually responding to a Ludovic Mirabel post about DBT *IS* just a waste of time. It's a wonderful name though, you must admit. |
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