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![]() "Clyde Slick" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... Robert Morein wrote: wrote in message ... [snip] I tend to agree with you that people tend to imagine differences, and that ABX diminshes that. Yep. But I also see very strong evidence, as collated by Ludovic, that ABX diminishes real differences. Or makes it obvious that the "golden ears" crowd can't always hear differences. (snip) In blind test methodology, each sample is labeled with a bland symbol, such as A, B, X, Y, etc. The "X" in ABX doesn't represent a particular sample of a component. The "X" can be any component in the test. However, the assumption that each of the subconscious processes in the brain can work with sample labels of this type is an assumption. Suppose an AB test were performed in which the bland labels were replaced by other kinds of labels, ie., pictures of fictitious amplifiers, or Picasso nudes? Replacing the bland labels (A, B, etc.) with other, more interesting symbols, might be entertaining, and the "golden ears" crowd might decide that the entertaining labels might make the gear sound better or those folks could attribute whatever subjective expectations they prefer to the test. But I think replacing the ABX labels would be silly and pointless. (snip) This means that ABX subjects such individuals to a test that relies on the ability to discriminate an abstract symbol, an ability that may not be fully developed in the individual! An ABX test isn't about discriminating between symbols. The subject being tested doesn't even have to know the symbols. The consequence of the inability of some of the subconscious processes to participate in discrimination of abstractly labeled samples is that the full mental capacity of the individual is not brought to bear on the problem. It disables part of the mind as a function of the test. See my previous comment. There should be a form of blind testing that works; one which is not subject to the obvious failures described by Ludovic; one which preserves the sensitivity experienced by sighted observers, The point of blind, objective testing in audio is to eliminate the expectations, assumptions, and "sensitivity" experienced by sighted observers, so that the person doing the listen can pay attention only to the sound, while responding to the valid concern for imagined differences and imagined discrimination. The idea with blind, objective testing is to eliminate "imagined differences and imagined discrimination" so that the listener pays attention only to what that person hears. Too bad that it does nothing to eliminate "imagined sameness". Very correct, succinctly said. |
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