Huh? It's a test for differences as you have stated many times. Volume differences at this level are usually not noticed as differences in loudness but rather as a quality difference - is this what was heard or were people reporting a loudness difference?It's not a SPL's ABX test, no.
If you find these studies they will most likely corroborate what I saidStudies in that regard are probably available on internet, but as far as i know, it's somewhere between 0.1db and 1.0db for the vast majority of the population.
It's difficult to take you seriously, Jon - unofficially means it was pure luck, I reckon or you weren't blindWe unoffically spotted differencial in the 0.5-1.0db range, with system set-ups 1 & 2, without much effort, but after with the 3rd set-up, a 0.2db diff was more or less identified, just before it was recalibrated to a tighter match.
I believe this SPL is your red herring - unless you can post significant ABX results that show the test is sensitive enough to spot such differences.Now it's somewhere between 0.00db and 0.10db diff, difficult to know with our equipment. Anyway, DUTs themselves are most probably not 0.00db on all bandwith, as a member pointed out... So we're probably thinking beyond the SPL-matching required for such test, but rather in the limits of DUT compensation.
It's difficult to take you seriously, Jon
Oh, you made that very clear all along the thread, mmerrill. Very clear indeed!
here is a clown smiley, just for you.

Keep your smile, it's only a test about converters, after all. 😉
Audiograms measure the lowest SPL at which one can hear particular frequencies. That's all. They don't measure what frequencies someone can hear if the SPL is turned up a little. They don't measure to what extent someone can hear distortion. They don't measure to what extent one can hear imaging or source localization.
What good does it do to have someone who can hear frequencies at very low SPL in the group if the SPL is going to be turned up higher and people are going to be listening to things like DACs that don't differ in a way that has anything to do with low SPL frequency recognition? It's bizarre anyone would think they are doing something scientifically sensible. It's almost like the flat earth thread in terms of people trying to use fictional science to prove to themselves whatever they want to believe.
What good does it do to have someone who can hear frequencies at very low SPL in the group if the SPL is going to be turned up higher and people are going to be listening to things like DACs that don't differ in a way that has anything to do with low SPL frequency recognition? It's bizarre anyone would think they are doing something scientifically sensible. It's almost like the flat earth thread in terms of people trying to use fictional science to prove to themselves whatever they want to believe.
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We all have wild frequency variations, young & old, from the ear canal structure which creates specific resonances that are individual - not just decimal dBs but a couple of dBs at certain frequencies are not unusual, AFAIR.gradual, i understand... but why it wouldnt be a big deal for the high frequency AND the unflatten response ?
We learn to accommodate to these spectral distortions as we grow & our ear canals change shape.
What's so great about flat, and when is it flat, at what level, and where do I have to sit, and...........and..........and.......?
Scott, what happened to SAW ??
Yes, they are also notoriously inaccurate, ooo, I thought I might have heard something, I better press the button....no....better not, I'd just be fooling myself, agghh, I don't know what to do now.....too....late.....hang on, did I just hear another tone? mmmmmAudiograms measure the lowest SPL at which one can hear particular frequencies. That's all. They don't measure what frequencies someone can hear if the SPL is turned up a little. They don't measure to what extent someone can hear distortion. They don't measure to what extent one can hear imaging or source localization.
What good does is have someone who can hear frequencies at very low SPL in the group if the SPL is going to be turned up higher and people are going to be listening to things like DACs that don't differ in a way that has anything to do with low SPL frequency recognition? It's bizarre anyone would think they are doing something scientifically sensible. It's almost like the flat earth thread in terms of people trying to use fictional science to prove to themselves whatever they want to believe.
Audiograms measure the lowest SPL at which one can hear particular frequencies. That's all. They don't measure what frequencies someone can hear if the SPL is turned up a little.
That's true.
Oh wait, that's actually wrong. 😛
dBHL is, in the very essence, the (audible) threshold of every frequencies.
''turned up a little'' is up to 96db (not to mention Corr. SPL-HL) in certain cases...
EDIT: let's put the images here as well
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
EDIT 2:
ISO/TR 389-5:1998 - Acoustics -- Reference zero for the calibration of audiometric equipment -- Part 5: Reference equivalent threshold sound pressure levels for pure tones in the frequency range 8 kHz to 16 kHz
There is a 2006 revision on ISO/TR 389-5 but i don't know what's implied. Maybe to follow the ISO 226:2003 ? Is someone here knows about that?
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You present this ABX test as something to be taken seriously - if it was all just a joke then why didn't you just say so, in the first place?Oh, you made that very clear all along the thread, mmerrill. Very clear indeed!..
Scott, what happened to SAW ??
I thought it prudent, in the furthering of my mission, too join forces with Dave (planet 10).......
Very like how most people perform in ABX testsYes, they are also notoriously inaccurate, ooo, I thought I might have heard something, I better press the button....no....better not, I'd just be fooling myself, agghh, I don't know what to do now.....too....late.....hang on, did I just hear another tone? mmmmm
Yes, they are also notoriously inaccurate, ooo, I thought I might have heard something, I better press the button....no....better not, I'd just be fooling myself, agghh, I don't know what to do now.....too....late.....hang on, did I just hear another tone? mmmmm
The audiologist explained to me that, to avoid such thing, they have to follow a procedure with implies to repeat many times the same trial. Also, they use tools such as the Madsen Otoflex 100 or similar...
I thought it prudent, in the furthering of my mission, too join forces with Dave (planet 10).......
hahaha!
Nice smart strategic move.
In order to conquer the universe, you have to have planet 10 on your side.
😀
*insert some Star Wars animated image here*
You present this ABX test as something to be taken seriously - if it was all just a joke then why didn't you just say so, in the first place?
See mmerill99, that's precisely why i'm losing interest to answer you. Because of that kind of comment...
Do they do statistical analysis of the trials? 😀The audiologist explained to me that, to avoid such thing, they have to follow a procedure with implies to repeat many times the same trial.
You are just throwing out scientific sounding device names hoping they sound convincing - do you know what these do?Also, they use tools such as the Madsen Otoflex 100 or similar...
Ah, the truth is too disturbing to face,I know but it's best to laugh it off instead of pretending like you are doing anything remotely serious or of interestSee mmerill99, that's precisely why i'm losing interest to answer you. Because of that kind of comment...
argumentum ad hominem, the most boring fallacy...
A coffee, please! and a new bone to nibble for our friend mmerrill.. 🙄
A coffee, please! and a new bone to nibble for our friend mmerrill.. 🙄
Ignorance of what you don't know is excusable but refusing to learn is not. You have been told many valuable things in this thread but you continue to refuse to countenance any of this & learn from it.argumentum ad hominem, the most boring fallacy...
A coffee, please! and a new bone to nibble for our friend mmerrill.. 🙄
Well Jon thankfully you are wrong, high frequency hearing loss is actually no big deal for the older audiophile, and the loss is usually so gradual that one adapts without even being aware of it......ah.....happy times ahead for all
And almost everyone ignores our 2nd type of hearing capabilitywhich degrades much less.
dave
Yep & why older audiophiles are just as discerning as younger - in fact more so due to experience as the hearing capability you speak of is located in the brain processing involved in auditory perception.And almost everyone ignores our 2nd type of hearing capabilitywhich degrades much less.
dave
Well Jon thankfully you are wrong, high frequency hearing loss is actually no big deal for the older audiophile, and the loss is usually so gradual that one adapts without even being aware of it......ah.....happy times ahead for all
gradual, i understand... but why it wouldnt be a big deal for the high frequency AND the unflatten response ?
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