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#1
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:42:08 +0200, Forwarder wrote: Don Pearce wrote: OK, I've had a bit of a think - and I've written a protocol, which I believe would be a basis of fair testing of audio components to resolve such issues as cable sound etc. I invite all here to read what I suggest, and let me know if I have either missed something, or am being unfair on one direction or another. http://www.donepearce.plus.com/odds/dbt/ I think this could be a way of defusing the vituperation that currently surrounds the subject. So what do you think? Hello Mr Pearce, What you suggest seems reasonable. We have done a very similar test with great success (for speaker cables). Yeah, riiiiggght. That's what Zipser claimed - *before* the 'Sunshine Trials' proved him wrong. So there was nothing wrong with the "sunshine trials" then? The "sunshine trials" are RPOVEN to be %100 applicable to this conundrum then? Nothing at all imanginable? Never ever concievable that there might have been something WRONG! with the "sunshine trials" ? In fact, after we did the test and tried it out again and again just to be sure, I sent a mail to James Randi himself, stating that I was ready to take the million dollar challenge with the subject matter being distinguishing between speaker cables. James Randi refused my challenge stating that "I accept, wire is not wire"... Interesting that you are still ducking *my* challenge......... Don't you know how to read? What are we trying to agree on with Don Pearce here? And what's with the .............. ????????????????? What I do not understand about this "vituperation" is that why is it that some of you engineer types are not agreeing to do a reverse "test". Just get yourself some demo exotic cables from a slimy high-end boutique and plug them in to your systems (provided that you guys have any such corresponding "system"s as some of us audiophools do). Do they have any effect? Just listen and tell us. Just do it. ![]() Done it, many times. No audible difference, not ever. You are a lying prick. You yourself have stated that you were a "tweeko" once. You have those tweeking gadgets in the picts of your website (though not employed). You obviously bought them in your time since you heard them doing something. Then you were exposed to these "tests"........................................... ................... You OWN A KRELL for chrissakes! Nuff said. Now go spit in the mirror. Anyone as such a detestable, disgusting blowhard freak like you, should spend at least 15 minutes each day making disgusting faces and spitting in the mirror! It would give you some perspective, you prock, as what you subkect people to with your disgusting existence. |
#2
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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Forwarder wrote:
You OWN A KRELL for chrissakes! Nuff said. Now go spit in the mirror. Anyone as such a detestable, disgusting blowhard freak like you, should spend at least 15 minutes each day making disgusting faces and spitting in the mirror! It would give you some perspective, you prock, as what you subkect people to with your disgusting existence. I get all messy fingers and typoish trying to talk to this disgusting, abominable, creepy, foul, hateful, hideous, nauseating, nerdy, obnoxious, offensive, revolting, rotten, OLD, sleazeball of a piece of **** called stewart pukerton. I meant to say : "Now go spit in the mirror. Anyone so detestable, disgusting, blowhard freak like you should spend at least 15 minutes each day making disgusting faces and spitting in the mirror! It would give you some perspective, you prick, as to what you subject people to with your disgusting existence." |
#3
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Forwarder" wrote in message .. . You are a lying prick. Yet another subjectivist burns up his credibility in public. |
#4
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Forwarder" wrote in message .. . You are a lying prick. Yet another subjectivist burns up his credibility in public. Krueger to the rescue. Gees, I wonder why you don't question the credibility of "stew of wart pukerton" when he calls me "dickhead" out of the blue?? Maybe it has something to do with *your* credibility? Every time I try to approach this subject you borgs turn hostile when after running out of arguments. This does not fail, happens each and every single time. Amazing! And then some of your profess to being against religion! ![]() obviously there is no connection. Now where is that duhmikey at? |
#5
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Forwarder" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: "Forwarder" wrote in message .. . You are a lying prick. Yet another subjectivist burns up his credibility in public. Krueger to the rescue. Gees, I wonder why you don't question the credibility of "stew of wart pukerton" when he calls me "dickhead" out of the blue?? Contrary to popular belief I don't read every audio post on Usenet. Maybe it has something to do with *your* credibility? Nahh, it has to do with the fact that being a golden ear is based some lacking of mental capacity for reason. Every time I try to approach this subject you borgs There you go again. That's strike 2. |
#6
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 12:24:50 +0200, Forwarder wrote:
Stewart Pinkerton wrote: On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:42:08 +0200, Forwarder wrote: Don Pearce wrote: OK, I've had a bit of a think - and I've written a protocol, which I believe would be a basis of fair testing of audio components to resolve such issues as cable sound etc. I invite all here to read what I suggest, and let me know if I have either missed something, or am being unfair on one direction or another. http://www.donepearce.plus.com/odds/dbt/ I think this could be a way of defusing the vituperation that currently surrounds the subject. So what do you think? Hello Mr Pearce, What you suggest seems reasonable. We have done a very similar test with great success (for speaker cables). Yeah, riiiiggght. That's what Zipser claimed - *before* the 'Sunshine Trials' proved him wrong. So there was nothing wrong with the "sunshine trials" then? The "sunshine trials" are RPOVEN to be %100 applicable to this conundrum then? Nothing at all imanginable? Never ever concievable that there might have been something WRONG! with the "sunshine trials" ? Zipser himself accepted the result in the week following the trials - it was only later, perhaps when amplifier sales began to drop off, that the excuses started................... In fact, after we did the test and tried it out again and again just to be sure, I sent a mail to James Randi himself, stating that I was ready to take the million dollar challenge with the subject matter being distinguishing between speaker cables. James Randi refused my challenge stating that "I accept, wire is not wire"... Interesting that you are still ducking *my* challenge......... Don't you know how to read? What are we trying to agree on with Don Pearce here? And what's with the .............. ????????????????? Oh, I have every confidence that you'll find some pretext for ducking out................... What I do not understand about this "vituperation" is that why is it that some of you engineer types are not agreeing to do a reverse "test". Just get yourself some demo exotic cables from a slimy high-end boutique and plug them in to your systems (provided that you guys have any such corresponding "system"s as some of us audiophools do). Do they have any effect? Just listen and tell us. Just do it. ![]() Done it, many times. No audible difference, not ever. You are a lying prick. You yourself have stated that you were a "tweeko" once. You have those tweeking gadgets in the picts of your website (though not employed). You obviously bought them in your time since you heard them doing something. Then you were exposed to these "tests".......................................... .................... Lying prick yourself - I said I'd done it many times and that there were no audible differences, which is absolutely true. That doesn't prevent one from having *been* a 'tweak', and then discovering by experiment what a load of ******** it all is. You OWN A KRELL for chrissakes! Nuff said. No, you dumb prick, the Krell is there because I have insensitive 3 ohm speakers. The Audiolab sounds identical, but gets very hot if I'm playing rock music. It's also there so that clowns like you can't claim that i've never heard a decent system. Now go spit in the mirror. Anyone as such a detestable, disgusting blowhard freak like you, should spend at least 15 minutes each day making disgusting faces and spitting in the mirror! It would give you some perspective, you prock, as what you subkect people to with your disgusting existence. That's a fine example of projection. I guess there's not much else to do this time of year in the Land of the Mid-day Dark................ -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#7
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 19:11:07 +0000, Signal wrote:
"Forwarder" emitted : Stewart Pinkerton wrote: On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:42:08 +0200, Forwarder wrote: Don Pearce wrote: OK, I've had a bit of a think - and I've written a protocol, which I believe would be a basis of fair testing of audio components to resolve such issues as cable sound etc. I invite all here to read what I suggest, and let me know if I have either missed something, or am being unfair on one direction or another. http://www.donepearce.plus.com/odds/dbt/ How many weeks did you spend working on this? "The proctor should be on the skeptical side of the argument." Is that so they can influence the participant? This is "fair"? No - it is so that they will not collude with the participant. This is necessary. The proctor's job is to sit and watch that the participant perform his tasks fairly. "..the person who makes the cable changes [..] should also be skeptical" As above. Shouldn't these people be neutral? No. That is why there is an observer who is on the believer side. Think about this. "..subject and the proctor leave the room"... Leave and enter the room every trial? Won't that cause disruption? How will this and the associated delay affect participants mood and memory? Memory of what? He will listen to the sound and decide whether it is sparkly or not - or whatever he has identified. He could clearly do this over the time gap necessitated by the cable change when he was sighted, so no problem. Why would you want the participant to stay in the room while the cable was changed anyway - that would be really stupid. Two points : 1. What you describe may be a challenge, a duel, a bet... it is certainly not a scientifically thorough investigation of anything. It is as close as I can get to scientific in the domestic environment which prompted the assertion of difference. If the test were removed to a lab, the participant could reasonably claim that the changed environment adversely affected his judgment. Don't let the best be an enemy of the good. 2. Get rid of that ABX snake oil ******** - never proven to work under these sort of conditions - use a verified DBT protocol instead. NOt sure what you mean - please explain. PS Make sure you have a statistically valid number of participants. Let's start at 200 and work upwards from there. You misunderstand the test and its purpose. I have said before several times, the purpose is not to see if cables have an audible effect. It is to see if a person who claims to hear a difference does in fact hear it, or merely imagines he heard it. One person, not 200 - unless you can find 200 cable sound hearers, fit them in a living room and prevent them from cribbing off each other while they make their identifications. And while you're at it, have them do a thousand trials instead of twenty for better statistical validity. Any other bright ideas? d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#8
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 19:11:07 +0000, Signal wrote: "Forwarder" emitted : Stewart Pinkerton wrote: On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:42:08 +0200, Forwarder wrote: Don Pearce wrote: OK, I've had a bit of a think - and I've written a protocol, which I believe would be a basis of fair testing of audio components to resolve such issues as cable sound etc. I invite all here to read what I suggest, and let me know if I have either missed something, or am being unfair on one direction or another. http://www.donepearce.plus.com/odds/dbt/ How many weeks did you spend working on this? "The proctor should be on the skeptical side of the argument." Is that so they can influence the participant? This is "fair"? No - it is so that they will not collude with the participant. This is necessary. The proctor's job is to sit and watch that the participant perform his tasks fairly. "..the person who makes the cable changes [..] should also be skeptical" As above. Shouldn't these people be neutral? No. That is why there is an observer who is on the believer side. Think about this. "..subject and the proctor leave the room"... Leave and enter the room every trial? Won't that cause disruption? How will this and the associated delay affect participants mood and memory? Memory of what? He will listen to the sound and decide whether it is sparkly or not - or whatever he has identified. He could clearly do this over the time gap necessitated by the cable change when he was sighted, so no problem. Why would you want the participant to stay in the room while the cable was changed anyway - that would be really stupid. Two points : 1. What you describe may be a challenge, a duel, a bet... it is certainly not a scientifically thorough investigation of anything. It is as close as I can get to scientific in the domestic environment which prompted the assertion of difference. If the test were removed to a lab, the participant could reasonably claim that the changed environment adversely affected his judgment. Don't let the best be an enemy of the good. 2. Get rid of that ABX snake oil ******** - never proven to work under these sort of conditions - use a verified DBT protocol instead. NOt sure what you mean - please explain. PS Make sure you have a statistically valid number of participants. Let's start at 200 and work upwards from there. You misunderstand the test and its purpose. I have said before several times, the purpose is not to see if cables have an audible effect. It is to see if a person who claims to hear a difference does in fact hear it, or merely imagines he heard it. One person, not 200 - unless you can find 200 cable sound hearers, fit them in a living room and prevent them from cribbing off each other while they make their identifications. And while you're at it, have them do a thousand trials instead of twenty for better statistical validity. Any other bright ideas? d ------------------------------------------------------------------- Don Pearce says: You misunderstand the test and its purpose. I have said before several times, the purpose is not to see if cables have an audible effect. It is to see if a person who claims to hear a difference does in fact hear it, or merely imagines he heard it. We understand your purpose. What is under discussion is your proposed protocol for proving the "reality" versus the "imagination" No evidence exists that any of the proposed "tests" (ABX and its cousins) do show differences between audio components to most members of a properly randomised (ie. representative), statistically valid listener group. (Basic research was never done even though there were four decades to do it in) On the contrary such, often faulty, studies as were reported in audio mags. all resulted in "no difference" verdict- whatever is being studied (cables, preamps, amps, cdplayers , dacs and yes loudspeakers.) Agreed Mr. Pearce. There is no obligation on you to buy an ABX switch, get someone to help you with double blinding etc. just to get the pseudo-scientific confirmation for what you already believe anyway. I'd go further and say that there is no pleasure or *profit* for *anyone* in embarking on a "test" that has never been properly researched and validated as an instrument for showing differences between audio components. Take it back : it may be good teaching exercise for those who never learnt to *listen* to music as more than wallpaper background noise. As of now the negative results of playing at ABX are just a placebo confirming the passionate conviction that "it all sounds the same" to those who are not interested in hearing differences between anything and anything else in audio components; sighted, blind or triple blind. I suppose it is a waste of breath to say once again that a "test" either proving or disproving the perceptions of millions of individual differences in the the brain cortex auditory receptors does not exist as yet. ABX it is not. Ludovic Mirabel |
#10
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: On 12 Jan 2006 11:59:32 -0800, wrote: You misunderstand the test and its purpose. I have said before several times, the purpose is not to see if cables have an audible effect. It is to see if a person who claims to hear a difference does in fact hear it, or merely imagines he heard it. We understand your purpose. What is under discussion is your proposed protocol for proving the "reality" versus the "imagination" No evidence exists that any of the proposed "tests" (ABX and its cousins) do show differences between audio components to most members of a properly randomised (ie. representative), statistically valid listener group. (Basic research was never done even though there were four decades to do it in) On the contrary such, often faulty, studies as were reported in audio mags. all resulted in "no difference" verdict- whatever is being studied (cables, preamps, amps, cdplayers , dacs and yes loudspeakers.) You're here again with randomized listener groups. They are *not* what I am dealing with. There is no reason to believe such groups would hear a difference even when sighted. I am dealing with one person who has identified a difference. One or two hundred persons. The "test" you want to stun him with has to be first *experimentally* shown to be right for the job ie capable of showing differences to a statistically valid majority of testees. Experiment not conviction , not faith, not "logic', not "common sense" is the key word. And the onus is on you to demonstrate it not on anyone else to convince you that you're spouting bilge water. And your conclusion that such studies were faulty on the basis that they yielded result of no difference is flatly ridiculous. Ever heard of the fallacy of the begged question? Dear Pearce, do not put words in my mouth. I did not say that "studies were faulty because etc. etc.." I said that in four decades of "testing" there stilll are no POSITIVE, statistically valid experiments demonstrating that "testing" allows the majority of panelists to hear differences beyween any audio components whatsoever. The "studies" are not faulty. They just don't exist. What exists and what iis faulty is bla bla bla about "tests" which have never been shown to test anything except their proponents' ability for fairy stories. Agreed Mr. Pearce. There is no obligation on you to buy an ABX switch, get someone to help you with double blinding etc. just to get the pseudo-scientific confirmation for what you already believe anyway. I'd go further and say that there is no pleasure or *profit* for *anyone* in embarking on a "test" that has never been properly researched and validated as an instrument for showing differences between audio components. Take it back : it may be good teaching exercise for those who never learnt to *listen* to music as more than wallpaper background noise. So you think that listening is not a good way to determine what you can hear? Interesting viewpoint, but not one that I suspect would find much support among the sentient. If you think that the above has any relation to what I said or that it makes any kind of sensee I'll leave you to enjoy it. As of now the negative results of playing at ABX are just a placebo confirming the passionate conviction that "it all sounds the same" to those who are not interested in hearing differences between anything and anything else in audio components; sighted, blind or triple blind. So you don't know what a placebo is? You think a placebo is something that prevents the fake medicine having a therapeutic effect? I'm starting to patience with you, I'm afraid. Pearce, Pearce your arrogance surpasses only your ignorance. I dealt with the effects of placebos all of my long professional life and you're teaching me about it and "losing patience" too. "Placebo" means "I will please" ( Latin - look it up) It means that a substance or a charm or an incantation without any physiological effect on the disease makes the patient feel happy for its psychological effects. The way I used it metaphorically (look up "metaphor" !!) is perfectly legitimate. It makes those who can't hear a difference happy that "science" and a "test" prove them right. I suppose it is a waste of breath to say once again that a "test" either proving or disproving the perceptions of millions of individual differences in the the brain cortex auditory receptors does not exist as yet. ABX it is not. Ludovic Mirabel At last you have said something I agree with. Thank you . You made my day Pearce. Luidovic Mirabel |
#11
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Forwarder" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: "Forwarder" wrote in message .. . You are a lying prick. Yet another subjectivist burns up his credibility in public. Krueger to the rescue. Gees, I wonder why you don't question the credibility of "stew of wart pukerton" when he calls me "dickhead" out of the blue?? Maybe it has something to do with *your* credibility? Every time I try to approach this subject you borgs turn hostile when after running out of arguments. This does not fail, happens each and every single time. Amazing! Permit me to add my agreement with the above. I wouldn't want my "enemy of Arny certificate" to expire from non use ![]() |
#12
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 12:24:50 +0200, Forwarder wrote: Stewart Pinkerton wrote: On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:42:08 +0200, Forwarder wrote: Don Pearce wrote: OK, I've had a bit of a think - and I've written a protocol, which I believe would be a basis of fair testing of audio components to resolve such issues as cable sound etc. I invite all here to read what I suggest, and let me know if I have either missed something, or am being unfair on one direction or another. http://www.donepearce.plus.com/odds/dbt/ I think this could be a way of defusing the vituperation that currently surrounds the subject. So what do you think? Hello Mr Pearce, What you suggest seems reasonable. We have done a very similar test with great success (for speaker cables). Yeah, riiiiggght. That's what Zipser claimed - *before* the 'Sunshine Trials' proved him wrong. So there was nothing wrong with the "sunshine trials" then? The "sunshine trials" are RPOVEN to be %100 applicable to this conundrum then? Nothing at all imanginable? Never ever concievable that there might have been something WRONG! with the "sunshine trials" ? Zipser himself accepted the result in the week following the trials - Ok, so now *that's* science! The sciecnencienceecee kind of science. it was only later, perhaps when amplifier sales began to drop off, that the excuses started................... Yeah right, I'm gonna take your word for it you retarted prick. Lying prick yourself - I said I'd done it many times and that there were no audible differences, Then you would have never become a "tweeko". You stated on many occasions, so did krueger as a mattar of fact, that you guys used to hear differences but that they were not reliable observations. Now that you are old enough that if a donkey ****s you in the ear you still wouldn't hear it................................................ .................................................. ................ which is absolutely true. That doesn't prevent one from having *been* a 'tweak', and then discovering by experiment what a load of ******** it all is. You OWN A KRELL for chrissakes! Nuff said. No, you dumb prick, the Krell is there because I have insensitive 3 ohm speakers. That's not the point you pathetic borg of a retard. Take a 200 dollar receiver to a lab, put it behind an ABX box, take your krell put it on the other end, level match, play, A, B, then X WHAM! no difference! *THAT'S* the point. The Audiolab sounds identical, And so would a yamaha receiver off the shelf of some woolworths. So why own audiophoolery exotic amps like krell and "audiolab" produced by conmen? but gets very hot if I'm playing rock music. That's not the point you pathetic asshole of a retard. Take a 200 dollar receiver to a lab, put it behind an ABX box, take your krell put it on the other end, level match, play, A, B, then X WHAM! no difference! *THAT'S* the point! It's also there so that clowns like you can't claim that i've never heard a decent system. You don't own a decent self, you don't own decent ears, you don't own *any* form of decency you prick, what the **** does your exotic audiophoolery amps have to do with anything?!?!?! and .................................................. .................................................. ................... Now go spit in the mirror. Anyone as such a detestable, disgusting blowhard freak like you, should spend at least 15 minutes each day making disgusting faces and spitting in the mirror! It would give you some perspective, you prock, as what you subkect people to with your disgusting existence. That's a fine example of projection. Yeah the mirror'll be projecting you. |
#13
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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Don,
I have carefully read your protocol for DBT of cables, and it seems to me airtight. You've covered all the places where most tests fail, and I would add only a couple of things: Don't let the subject know how he's doing until the test is over. Also, make sure you remove the cables before you flip the coin, so that the time required to make the change will be constant even when no change is called for. You might consider 18 trials, since 13 out of 18 comes closer to the 5% dividing line between success and failure. Norm Strong |
#14
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2006 11:22:38 -0800, wrote:
Don, I have carefully read your protocol for DBT of cables, and it seems to me airtight. You've covered all the places where most tests fail, and I would add only a couple of things: Don't let the subject know how he's doing until the test is over. Also, make sure you remove the cables before you flip the coin, so that the time required to make the change will be constant even when no change is called for. You might consider 18 trials, since 13 out of 18 comes closer to the 5% dividing line between success and failure. Norm Strong Thanks. Not only does the subject not know how he's doing until the end - nobody does. Only when the two forms are put side-by-side does that emerge. As for the time to change cables, I have covered that. Once a trial is done, the existing cable is removed to the other room before the coin is tossed. This means that the procedure is the same whether the cable changes or not. As for the number of trials, I used the number proposed by Stewart for his £1,000 challenge. Any trial that does not form part of that can, of course, have different pass criteria. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#15
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Posted to uk.rec.audio,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2006 11:22:38 -0800, wrote: Don, I have carefully read your protocol for DBT of cables, and it seems to me airtight. You've covered all the places where most tests fail, and I would add only a couple of things: Don't let the subject know how he's doing until the test is over. Also, make sure you remove the cables before you flip the coin, so that the time required to make the change will be constant even when no change is called for. You might consider 18 trials, since 13 out of 18 comes closer to the 5% dividing line between success and failure. Norm Strong Thanks. Not only does the subject not know how he's doing until the end - nobody does. Only when the two forms are put side-by-side does that emerge. As for the time to change cables, I have covered that. Once a trial is done, the existing cable is removed to the other room before the coin is tossed. This means that the procedure is the same whether the cable changes or not. As for the number of trials, I used the number proposed by Stewart for his £1,000 challenge. Any trial that does not form part of that can, of course, have different pass criteria. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com 96 contributions so far to another DBT audio component testing protocol.. Still waiting for the appearance of one, single report by a panel of 10 or more with: "Yes, we used your wonderful mod/protocol and yes, this one did not stop us from hearing the difference between the comparable A and B. with statistical validity. Hurrah, we did it at last after 40 years" Or should we wait another forty. The suspense is unbearable. Ludovic Mirabel |
#16
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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#17
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() ScottW wrote: wrote: The suspense is unbearable. Not near so unbearable as your logic. ScottW Hallo! Where were you? You must have finally found your way to your local Public Library I suggested some months ago you start frequenting,. All these big new words: "logic", fancy that. Lord knows what you'll find in Chambers next. Ludovic Mirabel |
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