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by WhitneyLand
2560 days ago
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This measurability nonsense is a red herring. Think about it, the question can easily be answered by blind A/B testing using real listeners with varying aptitude for discerning any differences and the qualities. Over the years people have tried and failed often to show much difference, when tests were done with proper controls and with scientific rigor. To be fair I haven't read up on the subject recently so if there's anything current that shows otherwise I'd be glad to read a link to a paper from a credible source. |
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The key thing is the equipment owner's self-suggestion, vs. whatever adequately controlled blind testing would reveal.
I've done a small amount of audio restoration work, in which you're often trying to judge (e.g.) how much of a noise-removal process to apply. How much of that high-frequency content is just noise, or is there actually some of the original signal still lurking in there? Apply too much noise-removal and you'll take away some of that signal.
In doing this you frequently bump up against the question, "Can I actually hear a difference?" My rather sobering experience when I actually put it to the test was that I was way beyond the point of being unable to identify different treatments of the same audio, any more than could be explained by random chance, and yet I was still telling myself I could hear a difference.