I did indeed mean PSR - edited my post. Thanks for pointing out.cturner wrote:I think you're referring to PSR (not PLR) here, aren't you? Shepherd's calculation is the same as Nugen's, who refers to it as "Short-term PLR" to connect it to the EBU standard.
Er... not that simple.cturner wrote:What I found interesting in my poking around is that the PMF DR measurement constructs a ratio based on peak to the loudest 20% of the program, where the EBU standard (if I understand it correctly) gates the top 10% and bottom 95%. This is to exclude things like "background noise" and "loud gun shots" from the measurement, but reflects a film or broadcast viewpoint.
Realtime DR it is hard to just base the value on "20% of the program". So the realtime calculation can be off to the static offline calculation (hence the offline tool). Unless a gating mechanic was introduced - just like in the ITU-R BS.1770-x specs (or EBU R128)
For the EBU standard (or ITU-R BS.1770-x, or... you get the idea), the system is setup to just "listen in" to a certain range that the MLk algo reads out - which the "integrated calculation" takes into account. Loud bursts above a certain threshold (think positive 8LU to 12LU) are mostly "ignored" in this long term calculation, but quiet sections are taken out of the average (ILk). In this case, the "absolute silence" threshold is at -70LUFS (that material will be discarded from the analysis). But the most important gate mechanic is -10LU rel below the absolute gated loudness level (in MLk).
Example: if the signal was at -26LUFS and suddenly drops off 20dB (due to silence in the program material), the "-10LU relative" gate activates and takes the measurement out of the equation. Until the signal rises back up and exceeds the 10LU relative. The threshold is not "fixed" - it "floats" according to the average signal measurements.
Source: https://tech.ebu.ch/docs/tech/tech3343.pdf
Actually... iTunes, Spotify and co these days do use the ITU-R BS.1770-x "internationally accepted standard" and not DR. They loudness analyze according to the ILk values and pretty much discard everything else.cturner wrote:As you said, everyone does it a little differently, and at the end of the day, it's the standards in use at the point of distribution that matter most: iTunes, Spotify, etc. Working backward from one's intended use isn't a bad guideline.
Reading out DR/PSR/PLR/LRA values is just additional bonus in this case. Unless you're at a distribution environment where accurate logging is essential (else - penalty fees). But even then, DR is just out of the big picture.
Insisting on this type of measurement now, with the backdoor to say "it's easier to understand", doesn't help anything IMO.
This is why Loudness Normalization according to ILk (average of a long term program measurement) ultimately dominated - it's neutral.plexuss wrote:You have to keep in mind that trying to meter loudness is trying to come up with one number that is an agregate of every single human's hearings - it can't be done. The intent is come up with a way to estimate what people might hear based on a very statsically shakey model. So arguing about which standard or technique is moot - as long as the approach is within the ballpark of the already stastically precarious model, it's good enough. This is perceptual metering and as such is trying to fit a square peg into a round hole: measuring subjetivity.
DR is just too inaccurate and really, really depends on the genre. If you can see my signature, I wrote about this issue back in the days already while the "DR Meter" came up in the first place
Don't get me wrong - I do understand where PMF (Tischmeyer)/MAAT Digital is coming from. They try to offer another "visual indication", another education tool. But to me, it's just unnecessary (just like the push of PSR) - now more so than during it's original incarnation.
IMO, Bob Katz with his K-System offered a better solution to the "Peak Limiting" problem than DR Metering did (which does need another metering spec backbone!). And then EBU R128 snuck in (sadly with not enough easy to understand/follow information back in the days for music AE's). Until people started to connect the dots with using "SLk for mastering music while staying within a certain range" (similar to what EBU R128 S1's "Loudness Parameters for short - form content" has as SLk range, which is +5LU max relative to the desired ILk target) - I was one of them.
I mean, let's be serious for a moment... how many people, that are not that interested in this field, really know/understand the various types of metering tools, and how they are used to their full efficiency? Now add in the "going their own way" meters like DR and PSR - and you'll see thread popping up over and over on audio communities that ask "what is this, why shall I use it" or "what is the best". Then those that do not(!) have an in-depth knowledge, start to say "use this and that", for mixing even.
And then we're back to square 1.
That... is my main crux with this whole topic
