Indeed what we might be seeing is correlation rather than causation. Still even correlation would be a step in the right direction - giving us some way to measure improvement. I figure that only a body of tests all showing this correlation is the only way to be assured of a correlation.LowOrbit wrote:Good work John, interesting results.
As you say, the differences are there but are an order of magnitude smaller than one might reasonably need to claim cause and effect.
Yes, I tried Audacity but only briefly as I felt all it could reveal were noise/freq/amplitude differences & this test seemed to me to be more likely to reveal timing differences.I have made a first pass at comparative sampling of the dac output using music files and looking for differences. It is proving harder than anticipated to get consistent data from Audacity, so I won't be drawn at this stage. But I have a test setup, and can capture data. A small start, and I need more time to get to grips with the methodology and techniques.
Mark
I suspect that both ITD (interaural Timing Differences) & IID(interaural Intensity Difference) cues at play here. The psychoacoustic effect of both together seem to enhance our localisation perception. In nature we use both the timing differences & intensity differences between our ears to locate the source of a sound.
If only one is present we may not analyse it as significant unless above a certain threshold. When both are present in an accurately realistic way we are more sensitive to the effect. I'm sure that by reducing the noise floor we can hear more of the IID cues. And we premise that noise floor reduction is also part of what MQN does. The ideal test would be to have both ITD & IID mapped for the same signal so we could correlate the two but this is currently beyond any test method that I know of. I've always felt that existing audio tests are much too limited as they do not take into account this aspect of our current model of hearing - tending to be limited to one channel tests with simple test signals.
Of course, the kicker in all of this is that a lot of recordings that we listen to are studio generated (do recording engineers go to the bother of panning using psychoacoustically accurate methods when emulating sound stage?) & often not recordings of a live event. Even if they are recordings of a live event we are reliant on the miking techniques used. Anyway, thats a whole udder discussion but worth bearing in mind.