44.1 vs 96khz music - double blind study conducted...
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- KVRAF
- 11839 posts since 23 Nov, 2004 from west of east
Tests prove that true believers will never let tests get in the way of their beliefs. It doesn't matter the limits of human hearing, the variables of equipment and rooms or the sources of material. Beliefs trump all.
Better to be happy with the music than to worry that some minute aspect has been lost to insufficient bits or frequencies. It's the music and always will be.
Better to be happy with the music than to worry that some minute aspect has been lost to insufficient bits or frequencies. It's the music and always will be.
We escape the trap of our own subjectivity by
perceiving neither black nor white but shades of grey
perceiving neither black nor white but shades of grey
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tony tony chopper tony tony chopper https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=3103
- KVRAF
- 3561 posts since 20 Jun, 2002
Why is it that average joe's in a forum think they can doubt about something (human hearing range) everyone knows for.. I don't know, certainly way over 50 years?
Can we get a topic about the world is flat?
Can we get a topic about the world is flat?
DOLPH WILL PWNZ0R J00r LAWZ!!!!
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- KVRist
- 127 posts since 13 Apr, 2008
because we are the music makers ?
the world isn't flat , space is just hollow.. surrounded with magnetic fields that keep everything together and in balance. what's behind that at the end? that would be the beginning, it's hollow and magnetic, the beginning is the end and visa versa ?
the world isn't flat , space is just hollow.. surrounded with magnetic fields that keep everything together and in balance. what's behind that at the end? that would be the beginning, it's hollow and magnetic, the beginning is the end and visa versa ?
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- KVRAF
- 6323 posts since 30 Dec, 2004 from London uk
Only on KVR could a double blind study turn into Philosophy 
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- KVRAF
- 4054 posts since 8 Jan, 2005 from Hamilton, New Zealand
Er yeah - that'd scare me too ... ?foosnark wrote:The Zoom H4 in interface mode actually just does 16 bits.metamorphosis wrote:What are youdonkey tugger wrote:Sascha Franck wrote: And I can promise you that ALL people recording acoustic instruments digitally are using 24bit these days,about?
m@
Cheers-
I make music: progressive-acoustic | electronica/game-soundtrack work | progressive alt-metal
Win 10/11 Simplifier | Also, Specialized C++ containers
Win 10/11 Simplifier | Also, Specialized C++ containers
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- KVRian
- 1116 posts since 18 Jan, 2004 from Los Angeles, California, USA
Part of the problem with the test that started all this is that it wasn't created to meet the needs of two opposing schools of thought. For a test like this to really work, it would need for proponents and detractors of the idea that higher sample rate delivery (beyond 44.1kHz or 48kHz) makes a difference to. It would need for them to both define what it would take for them to be satisfied that the other side was right. Chances are, at least two tests would be required. Then those are the tests that would need to be run. It does no good to run a test that does not satisfy the burden of proof placed by the opposing school of thought.
I can honestly say that I do not know which side is right, but I am growing increasingly interested in finding and helping find the answer. I've talked to one of the other VPs at BBMC about helping put a test in the vein I described together. Tonight I'll be speaking with my boss about the topic: his background in research includes being employed at the national level by several major western governments, including the U.S.
It remains to be seen if we will proceed with this testing, but I can tell you that if we do, it will be very thoroughly thought out, will require participation and input from a lot of people and will involve careful analysis by highly qualified parties as well as full disclosure of the (anonymous) data collected with careful note made of the testing environment.
If we proceed, who wants in?
We might have to organize groups in different parts of the country/world but anyone in the L.A. area would be very helpful at the early stages, though we'd welcome input across the world.
I can honestly say that I do not know which side is right, but I am growing increasingly interested in finding and helping find the answer. I've talked to one of the other VPs at BBMC about helping put a test in the vein I described together. Tonight I'll be speaking with my boss about the topic: his background in research includes being employed at the national level by several major western governments, including the U.S.
It remains to be seen if we will proceed with this testing, but I can tell you that if we do, it will be very thoroughly thought out, will require participation and input from a lot of people and will involve careful analysis by highly qualified parties as well as full disclosure of the (anonymous) data collected with careful note made of the testing environment.
If we proceed, who wants in?
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- KVRAF
- 6323 posts since 30 Dec, 2004 from London uk
The phrase "There are lies, damned lies and then statistics" comes to mind. If the tests are done by equally competent people then you will have a tie. Its a minefield fuelled with Psycho acoustics and math. Im drawn to the analogy of Lawcourts where the best argument wins regardless of the truthPer Lichtman wrote:Part of the problem with the test that started all this is that it wasn't created to meet the needs of two opposing schools of thought. For a test like this to really work, it would need for proponents and detractors of the idea that higher sample rate delivery (beyond 44.1kHz or 48kHz) makes a difference to. It would need for them to both define what it would take for them to be satisfied that the other side was right. Chances are, at least two tests would be required. Then those are the tests that would need to be run. It does no good to run a test that does not satisfy the burden of proof placed by the opposing school of thought.
I can honestly say that I do not know which side is right, but I am growing increasingly interested in finding and helping find the answer. I've talked to one of the other VPs at BBMC about helping put a test in the vein I described together. Tonight I'll be speaking with my boss about the topic: his background in research includes being employed at the national level by several major western governments, including the U.S.
It remains to be seen if we will proceed with this testing, but I can tell you that if we do, it will be very thoroughly thought out, will require participation and input from a lot of people and will involve careful analysis by highly qualified parties as well as full disclosure of the (anonymous) data collected with careful note made of the testing environment.
If we proceed, who wants in?We might have to organize groups in different parts of the country/world but anyone in the L.A. area would be very helpful at the early stages, though we'd welcome input across the world.
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- KVRAF
- 2135 posts since 12 Jul, 2004 from Brave New World
Not true.Sascha Franck wrote:And I can promise you that ALL people recording acoustic instruments digitally are using 24bit these days,
"Duct tape is like the force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together...." -Carl Zwanzig
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- KVRAF
- 1931 posts since 14 Aug, 2006 from Winnipeg
You seem to imply that the belief of the tester will influence the results. This is possibly true in a poorly-designed test, but a properly-designed double-blind test is intended to remove the bias of the person administering the test and the person being tested (in that neither one will know whether it's normal CD audio or superaudiophile audio at any given time).UltraJv wrote:If the tests are done by equally competent people then you will have a tie. Its a minefield fuelled with Psycho acoustics and math.
As long as the test designers design a good double-blind test, it doesn't really matter what the beliefs of the tester or the tested are.
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tony tony chopper tony tony chopper https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=3103
- KVRAF
- 3561 posts since 20 Jun, 2002
Sure, as if this was the FIRST TEST, IN 2008, IN A MAGAZINE. And before this magazine test, the human hearing range was known from.. thrown dice?Part of the problem with the test that started all this
If you doubt about this, then you doubt about one (or both) of these affirmations:
-human hearing's upper limit is 20khz at very best
-only 2 times the highest frequency is required to store an audio signal
If you do, you can do 2 things, one will give you credit, the other will make you pass as an idiot:
-analysing that this is false through well-defined testing, building up a theory, publishing it in something scientists can read & confirm it
-bring your grain of salt in a mostly musicians forum, with religious, paranoiac or misinformed arguments. This is no different than a bar conversation, I'm surprised that the FBI hasn't been mentionned as a reason why 96khz sounds better.
DOLPH WILL PWNZ0R J00r LAWZ!!!!
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- KVRAF
- 2844 posts since 1 Jan, 2003
tony tony chopper wrote:This is no different than a bar conversation, I'm surprised that the FBI hasn't been mentionned as a reason why 96khz sounds better.
Well, a double blind study (two guys in Dallas with their eyes closed) showed that 96khz definitely sounds better from the grassy knoll.
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- KVRian
- 1116 posts since 18 Jan, 2004 from Los Angeles, California, USA
The first one does seem to be more constructive than the second, but working towards the first does not preclude discussion in forums such as this one.tony tony chopper wrote:Sure, as if this was the FIRST TEST, IN 2008, IN A MAGAZINE. And before this magazine test, the human hearing range was known from.. thrown dice?Part of the problem with the test that started all this
If you doubt about this, then you doubt about one (or both) of these affirmations:
-human hearing's upper limit is 20khz at very best
-only 2 times the highest frequency is required to store an audio signal
If you do, you can do 2 things, one will give you credit, the other will make you pass as an idiot:
-analysing that this is false through well-defined testing, building up a theory, publishing it in something scientists can read & confirm it
-bring your grain of salt in a mostly musicians forum, with religious, paranoiac or misinformed arguments. This is no different than a bar conversation, I'm surprised that the FBI hasn't been mentionned as a reason why 96khz sounds better.
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tony tony chopper tony tony chopper https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=3103
- KVRAF
- 3561 posts since 20 Jun, 2002
But if you seriously think that anything will come out of this discussion...
This debate happens every 3 months.
This debate happens every 3 months.
DOLPH WILL PWNZ0R J00r LAWZ!!!!