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Topic: Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback  (Read 320344 times) previous topic - next topic
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Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #850
And the cognitive load is obvious to anyone who has taken the ABX blind tests.

You have some evidence that this is not true?

Only a person devoid of logic would try to prove a negative, so no surprised you asked.
Amir, please cite your valid, scientific evidence regarding cognitive loads of ABX tests.
The onus falls squarely on you.

There was a somewhat recent thread about ABX, where someone with expertise, but no strong pecuniary interests in "Hi-Re$" or misrepresenting M&Ms myth buster had this to say:
There is rather some research on discrimination with time lapse, and it is quite true that a break between A/X or B/X (or even A/B) will disrupt the subject, so time proximity WITHOUT glitches is absolutely requisite.  This is because partial loudnesses, rather than time domain waveforms, is what must be recalled, and the first level of memory for such is under 200 milliseconds. So proximate IN TIME presentation is the relevant, germane thing to do.

Since people do perform with such testing down to physical limits, I don't think there is a great deal of room left there for problems.

If you want to do an audio test, how else would you do this? By the way, sequential tests with proper windowing are documented as the best way to extract the most reliable answers from subjects.


cheers,

AJ
Loudspeaker manufacturer

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #851
Only a person devoid of logic would try to prove a negative, so no surprised you asked.

There is no such thing as "you can't prove a negative."  It is a mad up debating phrase/talking point and no more.  Just because Randi James says it, doesn't mean it has any proper basis in logic.

Steven Hales is professor of philosophy at Bloomsburg
University, Pennsylvania.
http://departments.bloomu.edu/philosophy/p...veanegative.pdf


But there is one big, fat problem with all this. Among professional
logicians, guess how many think that you can’t prove
a negative? That’s right: zero. Yes, Virginia, you can prove a
negative, and it’s easy, too.


[...]

So we’d better keep induction, warts and all, and
use it to form negative beliefs as well as positive ones. You
can prove a negative — at least as much as you can prove
anything at all.


I can show with ease that you know nothing about signal processing Ammar.  That is a negative.  And it can be proven using inductive reasoning.

Don't confuse reality with what you read online....
Amir
Retired Technology Insider
Founder, AudioScienceReview.com

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #852
And the cognitive load is obvious to anyone who has taken the ABX blind tests.
You have some evidence that this is not true?

Amir, please cite your valid, scientific evidence regarding cognitive loads of ABX tests.
The onus falls squarely on you.

Also, there was a somewhat recent thread about ABX, where someone with expertise, but no strong pecuniary interests in "Hi-Re$" or misrepresenting M&Ms myth buster had this to say:
There is rather some research on discrimination with time lapse, and it is quite true that a break between A/X or B/X (or even A/B) will disrupt the subject, so time proximity WITHOUT glitches is absolutely requisite.  This is because partial loudnesses, rather than time domain waveforms, is what must be recalled, and the first level of memory for such is under 200 milliseconds. So proximate IN TIME presentation is the relevant, germane thing to do.

Since people do perform with such testing down to physical limits, I don't think there is a great deal of room left there for problems.

If you want to do an audio test, how else would you do this? By the way, sequential tests with proper windowing are documented as the best way to extract the most reliable answers from subjects.

Please do try to comprehend what JJ has written here, thanks.

cheers,

AJ
Loudspeaker manufacturer

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #853
Only a person devoid of logic would try to prove a negative, so no surprised you asked.

There is no such thing as "you can't prove a negative."  It is a mad up debating phrase/talking point and no more.  Just because Randi James says it, doesn't mean it has any proper basis in logic..


The only proof of a universal negative is complete testing of everything, everwhere, under every condition.

So, practically speaking, no, you can not prove a universal negative, you can only offer evidence that the result is the same as the negative to some level of confidence. That is the only proof available in the real world for any universal negative.

So I don't think AJ's comment is so terribly wrong.
-----
J. D. (jj) Johnston

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #854
So?  The stated a fact: that in ABX tests the listener is instructed to listen to A and X and B and X and vote which association is closer.  That creates three stimulus that must be kept in mind:

An ABX test requires that a listener retains all three sounds
in working memory, and that they perform a min-
imum of two pair-wise comparisons (A with X and
B with X), after which the correct response must be
given; this results in the cognitive load for an ABX
test being high.


Explaining what ABX testing is doesn't require prior reference.  And the cognitive load is obvious to anyone who has taken the ABX blind tests.

You have some evidence that this is not true?


And once again, you quote-mine and omit the context, wherein Meridian is claiming ABX is a *problem*...and then you beg the question by declaring the problem 'obvious'. 

Quote
You are not in the audio field Steven so what is peculiar in your world is not here.



You're funny.  So, Meridian gets a pass? Hmm. Let's come back to that.


Quote
What is really at issue here is that folks/you don't want to hear any criticism of ABX testing.  That is supposed to be sacrilegious.  In real world it is not.  Facts can be stated about it and expert opinion expressed.


ah, the Amir Pirouette.  One of your favorite steps.

Quote
Here is Clark in his JAES paper, High-Resolution Subjective Testing Using a Double-Blind Comparator

When scientific tests have been performed, listeners'
audibility thresholds have appeared to be poorer by
orders of magnitude compared to casual tests.


There is no reference provided in this second paragraph in the Introduction of the paper.  And it is vague at heck.  What on earth is "casual tests?"


I would make a wild guess that 'casual tests' means 'sighted tests'...you know,the ones audiophiles 'conduct' all the time when they say things like, high resolution 'lifted the veil' that lies over Redbook.  And when blind ('scientific') testing doesn't give the same results, they claim that the method (and equipment) inhibits the *truth*.  They did that then; they still do it now. Which is what Clark reports.

Let's observe that Clark's 1982 paper had rather less sensory testing literature to draw on than Meridian's 2014 paper.  Still, Clark should have backed up his claims, too.  Clarks' intro is very brief and has no cites; Meridian's 2014 Intro is much longer, and actually *is* cite-filled...*except* for that paragraph where he claims ABX is problematic.  Clark's 1982 convention paper was an *engineering report* whereas Meridian's 2014 convention paper is a *prize winning peer reviewed research paper*, as you told us several times, like a child parading his new birthday toy.  So that omission of cited for that quite bold claim of theirs, seems quite strange. But hey, I only deal with peer-reviewed scientific papers  -- reading, writing, editing, reviewing -- on a regular basis between doing science, what do I know? You run a high end audio shop,  and invest your time, emotions, and boundless energy in googling and copy-pasting tidbits from the Internet, championing 'high resolution' digital formats that offer miniscule audible difference, and ankle-biting Arny Kruger.  Which makes you an expert in something, I guess.

But whatever it is, no one's buying it here.

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #855
Amir, you might also want to address what 'stress' that Meridian's A/B trials entailed, given that they reportedly took over three hours per subject, plus breaks, to accomplish.

Is 'cognitive load' the only stressor?  And might there be stressors associated with A/B that are lessened by A/B/X?  Meridian at least should have hedged their bets and stuck in some 'more research is needed' boilerplate  on that score.  Instead they simply recommend 'consideration' of the use of tests that 'minimize cognitive load' -- as if the supposed 'problem ' had been demonstrated and the 'solution' found. 

Maybe they'll fix it in the next draft?




Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #856
The only proof of a universal negative is complete testing of everything, everwhere, under every condition.

We don't live in idealistic world.  My toaster is not unsafe because it has been through a set of UL tests that give high confidence of it not catching on fire.  I certainly don't worry about it combusting when I put toast in it every morning.

All of these audio tests with negative outcomes are used exactly the same way.  We use them to inform us that there is no difference.  In other words, we rely on negative proof all the time in these discussions.  Yet for some reason are quick to state, "you can't prove the negative."  Why do we say that when we are considering negative outcomes sufficient to have created negative proof?

Quote
So, practically speaking, no, you can not prove a universal negative, you can only offer evidence that the result is the same as the negative to some level of confidence. That is the only proof available in the real world for any universal negative.

That's right.  Ditto for positive outcome.  There is no universal positive proof either.  Newton thought he had it and then came Einstein.  We thought we had it with Einstein only to have "spooky action at a distance" come true.  Yet I sit there relying on Newton having been right enough.  Lack of its universality is not an issue.  The only time Einstein comes into play is when I use my navigation system.

When I look at audio listening tests, there are so many factors that could render their outcomes unreliable whether positive or negative.  Both outcomes are interesting equally to examine and learn from.

Quote
So I don't think AJ's comment is so terribly wrong.

Wonder what he thinks of being damned by faint praise this way.    I hope you know he has no technical intent in any of these discussions....

Edit:typos.
Amir
Retired Technology Insider
Founder, AudioScienceReview.com

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #857
And the cognitive load is obvious to anyone who has taken the ABX blind tests.
You have some evidence that this is not true?

Amir, please cite your valid, scientific evidence regarding cognitive loads of ABX tests.
The onus falls squarely on you.


Amir
Retired Technology Insider
Founder, AudioScienceReview.com

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #858
The only proof of a universal negative is complete testing of everything, everwhere, under every condition.

We don't live in idealistic world.  My toaster is not unsafe because it has been through a set of UL tests that give high confidence of it not catching on fire.  I certainly don't worry about it combusting when I put toast in it every morning.

All of these audio tests with negative outcomes are used exactly the same way.  We use them to inform us that there is no difference.  In other words, we rely on negative proof all the time in these discussions.  Yet for some reason are quick to state, "you can't prove the negative."  Why do we say that when we are considering negative outcomes sufficient to have created negative proof?


How inaccurate you become when it suits you!

Just looking at the supposed 'negative proof' papers at hand -- Meyer & Moran 2007 in JAES on 'hi rez' vs Redbook, Meyer 1991 in Stereo Review on amplifier differences -- neither one makes simple, adamantly conclusive negative 'proof' claims of the sort you're propping up to knock down.  They inform us (in one case) that no significant difference was found in their trials (except when it was, when playback levels were high), and that the onus is on high rez proponents to find one  (Meridian's paper is of course a direct response to that);  and in the other case, we are informed quite politely that that difference *was* found,  under certain circumstances (amplifiers reacting differently to a difficult load), but that most 'good' solid state amps 'probably' sound identical 'or at least very much alike' , 'within their power limits'.

You, once again, are painting 'objectivist' views as being simplistic, sweeping and over-general, rather than being qualified and modified with adjectives like 'likely and 'probably' and pointing out the conditions under which audible differences do manifest.  It's the old subjectivist canard that 'objectivists' believe 'all X sound the same', period, full stop.


Now, why would you propagate such a canard?  Is there a 'technical intent' there?

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #859
I can't help thinking that a lot of listening test stress could be reduced by contributing anonymously and not turning the test into a whosbest competition.
In most cases it is the device that's under test, not the listener. Participants who don't share their result because they know (feedback) it's negative and think they have failed can have an effect on the accuracy of the test.

IMO the most interesting part of the paper is the audibility of time domain effects of filters. AFAIK the authors only give "potential" explanations. They try to explain why the 44.1 kHz filter was less audible than the 48 kHz filter with the difference in pre- and post-ringing. If that's true, doesn't that mean that a ringing filter in a very high resolution ADC (e.g. DXD) will have a deleterious effect that can't be undone ?
If so, it would be interesting to know how much ringing is tolerable, if this is linked at all to sampling rate, and how cascading filters effects audibility. In a typical recording chain there are three filters: 1) ADC (hi-res), 2) mastering filter (AKA SRC to redbook), 3) DAC (anti-imaging filter).
DSD seems to be immune to this "problem", but I suppose that can only be verified with non-pcm-speakers.

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #860
No it is not.

Yes, it is. You defend that position and with your typical amir spiel tried to, once again, shift the burden of proof demanding from others to disprove your position.
The problem here is not proving a negative, but assuming you are right because there is no strong evidence that your position is wrong. That's a pretty absurd and fallacious position to take, but hey, we're not surprised.
"I hear it when I see it."

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #861
If so, it would be interesting to know how much ringing is tolerable, if this is linked at all to sampling rate, and how cascading filters effects audibility. In a typical recording chain there are three filters: 1) ADC (hi-res), 2) mastering filter (AKA SRC to redbook), 3) DAC (anti-imaging filter).


The last filter with the lowest cutoff is what matters. The "mastering filter" can be extremely steep since the anti-imaging (or resampling in your player) filter dictates how an impulse will finally look like.

Just use a slower roll off, min phase resampling filter that allows imaging (aliasing) and all the alleged pre-ringing problems in your CDs will be gone. That's what Meridian says and actually uses in their products...
"I hear it when I see it."

 

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #862
Maybe testees could have done better than ~60% had they used Proper protocol.

Or worse.

Really, instead of the weird conditions why didn't they just use
a) a filter that should be easily audible (e.g. <16 kHz cutoff)
b) a steep 44.1 kHz filter (like the one they used)
c) a more real-world like filter that is less steep (they could even use the one that they actually use in their products...)
d) a filter that even a super human shouldn't be able to hear (40+ kHz for example)

to demonstrate that their A-X test and methodology, filtering software, switching software ... works properly?

A simple test to check their tweeter without measurements could have been using b) with HF noise added that has a similar spectrum to the original track..

I suspect they didn't have a "low anchor" like (a) because it wouldn't have been a low anchor for the older listeners, but where it worked as a low anchor for the younger listeners it would have shown what easily audible differences look like in this test context. It would have highlighted how weak the audibility of this steep 22kHz filtering is.

There's a possible interesting follow up to all of this, and given there seems little point repeating all the dither tests, it would be a shorter test. First is your option c). Second is their really steep filter, but put essentially all the original HF content back afterwards. So you keep the horrible ringing, but keep almost all of the original HF too.

As a separate test, just play back what's missing from each version and check if that's audible on its own.

Some ultra high quality test recordings of what comes out of the speakers under each condition would be helpful too.


That would help to disentangle high frequency content vs ringing vs intermodulation as the cause of these barely audible differences.

FWIW I would guess that they've listened to option c) plenty, and know the answer already.

Cheers,
David.

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #863
IMO the most interesting part of the paper is the audibility of time domain effects of filters. AFAIK the authors only give "potential" explanations. They try to explain why the 44.1 kHz filter was less audible than the 48 kHz filter with the difference in pre- and post-ringing. If that's true, doesn't that mean that a ringing filter in a very high resolution ADC (e.g. DXD) will have a deleterious effect that can't be undone ?
If so, it would be interesting to know how much ringing is tolerable, if this is linked at all to sampling rate, and how cascading filters effects audibility. In a typical recording chain there are three filters: 1) ADC (hi-res), 2) mastering filter (AKA SRC to redbook), 3) DAC (anti-imaging filter).
DSD seems to be immune to this "problem", but I suppose that can only be verified with non-pcm-speakers.

Yes I thought the most interesting aspect the [apparent] reduction in transparency with a filter to emulate a reduction in sample rate.  Not so much for the 48kHz emulation (condition 4, where "the t-test just failed to reach significance at the 5% level"), but particularly for the 44.1kHz emulation (condition 1) which -- especially for the "high yield" sections -- was apparently quite an obstacle to transparency.

This BS study lacked investigatory drive in my view. It was very passive. It seems that the study was conceived and implemented, full stop. I note that its two main conclusions are expressed vaguely, or even cryptically.

I'd have thought that preliminary informal tests should have been done with subjects with outstanding hearing and listening skills. This presumably would have shown up high yield (revealing) sections. Then a variation could have been done by way of substituting a different loudspeaker system, or even headphones to see whether a difference was still in evidence.

And if differences could still be heard, then experimentation with different MATLAB settings for example with a wider transition band for the Nyquist filtering for 44.1kHz, to see whether that aided transparency. Such courses of action would have been constructive.

The way the two "main" conclusions "offered" are expressed is also passive, and not particularly helpful. It is obvious that audible sounds exist that cannot be transparently encoded at 16/44. Some children can hear a loud sine wave at 23kHz and a standard CD cannot render 23kHz at all. Also if a CD is played back with ear-splitting gain, then dither noise may be audible even to middle-aged adults. It is accordingly quite cryptic and unhelpful to offer as a conclusion: "first, there exist audible signals that cannot be encoded transparently by a standard CD".  Perhaps what was meant was "audible signals contained in conventional music recorded with high definition and listened to at a normal listening level".

As for the second conclusion "offered", "an audio chain used for such experiments must be capable of high-fidelity reproduction", as someone else has already pointed out in this thread there is no sign the study investigated use of different loudspeaker systems, including hi-fi speakers of modest performance. In any case, the phrase "high-fidelity reproduction" is too vague to be helpful.

In summary,
  • the BS experimental study appears to have been executed in a passive way, not taking advantage of preliminary informal testing to pinpoint what was causing an apparent lack of transparency in the filter emulations (particularly the emulation for a sample rate reduction to 44.1kHz), and
  • the two main conclusions offered are vaguely expressed and unhelpful, and in the case of the second conclusion (about the need for a hi-fidelity reproduction chain) not actually supported by experiment.


Further comments

For someone familiar with MATLAB audio filters, it is a walk in the park to alter the parameters. The BS study could have been so much more. In my opinion, it was a narrowly focussed endeavour, with vaguely expressed conclusions.

For high definition proponents the subjective comments included in two consecutive paragraphs on page 10 of the report might lead to wild rejoicing. However it is not clear in the report wording that the comments were screened so as to be limited to those test subjects who scored over 50% correct, with statistical significance, for the particular test condition commented on. The two paragraphs begin, respectively:

Quote
It was reported that filtering gave "softer edges" to the instruments, and "softer leading edges" to musical features with abrupt onsets or changes.

Quote
Listeners described that quantization gave a "roughness" or "edginess" to the tone of the instruments, ...


It appears that the second quote is in relation to the so-called "probe" test conditions involving quantization to 16 bits without dither.  (Straw man conditions, these ones, as dithering is routine for preparing a CD master from a higher bit depth version.)  The last sentence of the paragraph begins :
Quote
This could be an effect of quantization distortion; it is interesting that this was audible even in a 24-bit system,...".

Why wouldn't it be?  This is a very strange remark. A 32-bit system would still potentially reveal distortion if feed truncated 16-bits from a low noise undithered source.

The sentence continues:
Quote
... and is consistent with the hypothesis of Stuart [29] that 16 bits are not sufficient for inaudible quantization.

Whilst it is true (well established in fact) that truncation to 16-bits has been found to be inadequate, this comment in my opinion is passive, and misdirected. Real life CDs are not produced from undithered low-noise truncations to 16 bits. A lay reader could easily fail to realise that this comment is in relation to a mere "probe" condition, not a realistic condition. I suggest it would have been helpful in the interests of academic neutrality and clarity to have continued with qualifying sentences along these lines:

[Hypothetical sentences:]  We note that in practice standard CDs are not produced with quantization alone (that is to say discarding all bits beyond the 16th by way of truncation) but with dither. Dither allows bits beyond the 16th to be reflected in the audible signal, despite the signal being distributed to the consumer in a 16-bit format. We would stress that the test conditions that involved quantization without accompanying dither were merely a "probe" to serve as a reference point: there is no suggestion that standard CDs are produced in this way.

Alas, no such qualifying sentences appear in this part of the report. I think it is this tenth page of the report that will be fodder for high definition proponents not averse to letting technical accuracy get in the way of condemning the standard CD format for its "insufficient" 16 bits; or simply not understanding the benefits of dither.

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #864
If you look at the final results, fig. 4, it just doesn't make much sense.
If you focus on the arithmetic mean results with the 16-bit conditions, the 44.1 kHz filters were steeper, with longer and louder ringing and cutoff closer to the audible range, but they were harder to detect than the 48 kHz ones. So the filter seems to make little difference. 24-bit scored better for 44.1 kHz but worse for 48 kHz, so quantization doesn't seem to have a consistent effect either.

But on the other hand all the means are well within 1 standard error of each other. Condition 4 is as much an outlier as is condition 1 in that respect.


Conclusion: their test resulted in an average 60% score pretty much regardless of filter or quantization used. They supposedly heard something, the question is what.
Did I mention that more information and data is needed?
"I hear it when I see it."

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #865
All of these audio tests with negative outcomes are used exactly the same way.

Wrong. It simply means you don't comprehend their meaning, that the particular test failed to yield the claimed differences, real or imaginary. That the burden of proof still lies with your sides constant claims of audibility, real or imagined.
But that isn't an excuse to blatantly fabricate positive results, be they ABX logs, amp distortions or 16/44 non-transparency, just to sell $50k bling and "Hi-Re$" hardware/media, etc.
Further, you have presented zero evidence that ABX creates higher cognitive loads than A/B, or your claimed gold standard, ABC/HR (perhaps +/-10% shell game more appropriately).
In this regard the BS paper contains a load of it, but it isn't cognitive.
Once more:
There is rather some research on discrimination with time lapse, and it is quite true that a break between A/X or B/X (or even A/B) will disrupt the subject, so time proximity WITHOUT glitches is absolutely requisite.  This is because partial loudnesses, rather than time domain waveforms, is what must be recalled, and the first level of memory for such is under 200 milliseconds. So proximate IN TIME presentation is the relevant, germane thing to do.

Since people do perform with such testing down to physical limits, I don't think there is a great deal of room left there for problems.

If you want to do an audio test, how else would you do this? By the way, sequential tests with proper windowing are documented as the best way to extract the most reliable answers from subjects.


The conclusion is that only those with vested pecuniary interests would draw any conclusion from the BS paper, other than it was highly contrived and inconclusive.

cheers,

AJ

Loudspeaker manufacturer

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #866
If you look at the final results, fig. 4, it just doesn't make much sense.

Agreed.


Quote
If you focus on the arithmetic mean results with the 16-bit conditions, the 44.1 kHz filters were steeper, with longer and louder ringing and cutoff closer to the audible range, but they were harder to detect than the 48 kHz ones. So the filter seems to make little difference. 24-bit scored better for 44.1 kHz but worse for 48 kHz, so quantization doesn't seem to have a consistent effect either.

Yes, in figure 4  the scores for the rectangle symbol (for 16-bit truncation) and square symbol (for dithered to 16 bits) are slightly lower on the graph for the 22050Hz cutoff than for the 24000Hz cutoff; suggesting it was slighter easier to hear the effect of the emulation of a 48kHz sample rate; under those conditions of quantization.  Yet with no quantization, it was the emulation of a 44.1kHz sample rate that was slightly easier to detect (scores marked with a circle)!

But with overall results hovering around only 60% correct and variations about that of only a few percent in the overall scores, it is hard to draw conclusions.


Quote
Did I mention that more information and data is needed?

I wouldn't have minded seeing a similar graphical representation to Figure 4 of the results for the "high yield" sections in isolation, though there is already some narrative about statistical outcomes for that [which I found a bit difficult to follow] in part 3.2 of the paper.  It could be suggested that the low yield sections are a distraction given the scores for those sections were so very poor (and commensurate with pure chance). They arguably are generating statistical noise, though academically it may be a conservative statistical approach not to exclude them.

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #867
And what about that specific paragraph about their post-hoc analysis that showed almost identical mean for no quantization and 16-bit quantization?
"I hear it when I see it."

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #868
The standard deviations all overlap. Doesn't that mean we shouldn't be drawing any conclusions?

(stats isn't my thing)

Cheers,
David.

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #869
No it is not.

Yes, it is.

No it is not.    Or else you wouldn't feel the urge to keep posting and posting and get unprofessional to boot.

Quote
You defend that position and with your typical amir spiel tried to, once again, shift the burden of proof demanding from others to disprove your position.

No I didn't shift the burden of proof.  I stated the reality rather than some made up talking points we use to get out of providing a technical explanation.  Both sides are in equal position to prove their point in a forum discussion.  There is no overriding rule that says you can sit back and let me post and post as evidenced by the fact that you post more than I do on this topic.  You are acting as I say, but saying otherwise.  That is not logical and I won't accept it as being such.

You don't know what my position is anyway. 

Quote
The problem here is not proving a negative, but assuming you are right because there is no strong evidence that your position is wrong. That's a pretty absurd and fallacious position to take, but hey, we're not surprised.

Once again you don't know my position so your foundation is wrong.  The position I take is very simple and cannot be denied:

1. High resolution audio is coming to market and no one cares how much anyone jumps up and down here.

2. This is not 2007 where we were discussing whether two new physical formats (DVD-A and SACD) had enough merit to force us all to buy all new players and deal with their strict copyright to allow us to make convenient copies.  High-resolution files today are 100% compatible with all of our music servers and many appliances. 

3. Playing back high-resolution audio has zero, zero cost associated with it.  It does not enrich any major company with patents (Sony/Philips or DVD Forum contributors).  The notion then that anything good about high resolution audio is motivated by money is totally absurd.

4. The 16/44 is 99.99999% of time a down converted version of a 24-bit higher sampling rate file.  Per #3, I don't need anyone to screw around with my bits.  If  you or anyone else want 16/44, you can generate them from high resolutions stereo master using whatever dither, resampler, etc. you want.  I have no reason to follow your preference there, nor does anyone who wants the best quality.  I know the best quality will always be a generation up from 16/44.  Want the original bits thank you very much.

5. By a miracle, the music labels have decided to license their studio masters to us.  You don't see that in movies, do you?  This is a gift to be embraced.

6. CD as a format will decline and go away as an option for your music purchases in a few years. There is no longer any reason to stamp plastic and spin it with a motor to read and play digital bits.  You will as sure as sun comes out the east, face the situation of wanting your favorite music yet it will only be available in MP3 or AAC.

Last night I went searching high and low to find the CD version of one of my favorite soundtrack composers, Max Richter's album: Perfect Sense: Original Film Soundtrack.  Yet Amazon only lists the stupid MP3 version.  This is the first time I have seen a movie soundtrack skip CD release.

Wake up and smell the coffee please.  You need to be 1000% in favor of more consumer choice.  You don't have to buy high-res but you better join me in supporting it as otherwise we will all be screwed with the first and biggest jump back in fidelity.

These are the facts.  None of it is impacted by any logical fallacy or debating terms.  None of it is impacted of what you think of Stuart's paper or what you think you know about listening tests or signal processing.

Don't confuse me engaging you on the technical side as it being my "position" that I have to win such arguments.  I just find it fun to turn the tables on people who keep demanding double blind tests exactly that and see them squirm.  You squirm because you held an unreasonable position that such tests could not be passed.  Well, they have been passed and if that is what you want to base your belief on it instead of the reality of the marketplace, then you suffer and must defend your position.  The burden is on your shoulder and big time.

Don't go responding to this post because per above, you don't matter.  AJ doesn't matter.  Krab doesn't matter.  None of you do.  Get a sense of reality, conduct yourself more professionally and join the audiophiles elsewhere in increases the choice of formats we have.  Heaven knows I am getting bored interacting with you all.
Amir
Retired Technology Insider
Founder, AudioScienceReview.com

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #870
No it is not.    Or else you wouldn't feel the urge to keep posting and posting and get unprofessional to boot.

Wow, childish behavior and irony. I guess that is how "professional experts" act normally?!

There is no overriding rule that says you can sit back and let me post and post as evidenced by the fact that you post more than I do on this topic.  You are acting as I say, but saying otherwise.  That is not logical and I won't accept it as being such.

You don't know what my position is anyway.

Oh amirm, have you already forgotten what you posted yesterday?
Here's what you posted:
"And the cognitive load is obvious to anyone who has taken the ABX blind tests.

You have some evidence that this is not true?"

and
"What is really at issue here is that folks/you don't want to hear any criticism of ABX testing."

Of course you'd turn the attention away from this ridiculous statement and turn it on me. We've seen this throughout this entire thread many, many times.

You've also stated your position before, and even told us several stories that were completely off-topic and a waste of Internet traffic. I guess you forgot that as well.


Once again you don't know my position so your foundation is wrong.  The position I take is very simple and cannot be denied:

Yes, and my position on rocks falling to the ground cannot be denied either. See, I can chance topics too.



You need to be 1000% in favor of more consumer choice.

I am, and we can only hope that hi-res will not replace CDs because then we will not only be stuck with bigger files, but much more importantly with files that sound as horrible as CDs do today.


You don't have to buy high-res but you better join me in supporting it as otherwise we will all be screwed with the first and biggest jump back in fidelity.

I'd never support a demonstrably intellectually dishonest person. Also, there is no big jump in fidelity going from CD to hi-res. The big jump is not in the format, but in the recording, mixing, mastering.
We've had this discussion already, you also forgot that?


These are the facts.  [...] I just find it fun to turn the tables on people who keep demanding double blind tests exactly that and see them squirm.  [...]  The burden is on your shoulder and big time.

Don't go responding to this post because per above, you don't matter.  AJ doesn't matter.  Krab doesn't matter.  None of you do.  Get a sense of reality, [...]

I think we call that being despicable and delusional.
"I hear it when I see it."

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #871
1. High resolution audio is coming to market and no one cares how much anyone jumps up and down here.
Is anybody denying that here? We're denying the necessity of hi-res audio format delivery to the end-user. People here noticed that the hi-res craze will happen years ago, and pointed out the stupidity of the endeavour back then already. Nothing has changed since then.

2. This is not 2007 where we were discussing whether two new physical formats (DVD-A and SACD) had enough merit to force us all to buy all new players and deal with their strict copyright to allow us to make convenient copies.  High-resolution files today are 100% compatible with all of our music servers and many appliances.
Are they? It's not unthinkable or impossible for a company to use or create an audio container with DRM and special hardware or software requirements.

3. Playing back high-resolution audio has zero, zero cost associated with it.  It does not enrich any major company with patents (Sony/Philips or DVD Forum contributors).  The notion then that anything good about high resolution audio is motivated by money is totally absurd.
Monty has pointed out that in practice hi-res playback might have a lower audio fidelity due to distortions coming from high-frequency content.

The 16/44 is 99.99999% of time a down converted version of a 24-bit higher sampling rate file.  Per #3, I don't need anyone to screw around with my bits.  If  you or anyone else want 16/44, you can generate them from high resolutions stereo master using whatever dither, resampler, etc. you want.  I have no reason to follow your preference there, nor does anyone who wants the best quality.  I know the best quality will always be a generation up from 16/44.  Want the original bits thank you very much.
People like you always know that the "best quality" is up from whatever the standard is currently. That's the oldschool audiophile delusion.

5. By a miracle, the music labels have decided to license their studio masters to us.  You don't see that in movies, do you?  This is a gift to be embraced.
I still wonder why you assume hi-res masters to be inherently superior to CD masters. What prohibits engineers from fucking up those, too? They managed to make 16/44 sound like shit, it's just as easily possible with 24/96. Audio technology is not the problem, it's human error.

6. CD as a format will decline and go away as an option for your music purchases in a few years. There is no longer any reason to stamp plastic and spin it with a motor to read and play digital bits.  You will as sure as sun comes out the east, face the situation of wanting your favorite music yet it will only be available in MP3 or AAC.
Lossy delivery can be acceptable with proper mastering. The CD releases you get today are (depending on genre) sometimes hardly more than 12bit/32khz anyway.

Wake up and smell the coffee please.  You need to be 1000% in favor of more consumer choice.  You don't have to buy high-res but you better join me in supporting it as otherwise we will all be screwed with the first and biggest jump back in fidelity.
See above. The conjecture that audio engineers will magically improve their craft just due to the existence of a hi-res audio format is absurd. Again, it is already possible to produce proper releases on CD today (which has been demonstrated in the classical and soundtrack genres), it's just not done.

Don't go responding to this post because per above, you don't matter. AJ doesn't matter. Krab doesn't matter. None of you do. Get a sense of reality, conduct yourself more professionally and join the audiophiles elsewhere in increases the choice of formats we have. Heaven knows I am getting bored interacting with you all.
Get lost already. Nobody gains any insight from reading your FUD nonsense and propaganda.
It's only audiophile if it's inconvenient.

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #872
Don't go responding to this post because per above, you don't matter.  AJ doesn't matter.  Krab doesn't matter.  None of you do.

In the sense that none of us are the intended target of the $hysters and $cammers peddling $50k bling and "Hi-Re$", of course not Amir. We are certainly not going to be fleeced by shell games and contrived or outright fabricated "tests" posited as evidence of audibility.
The target there is the $cam addicted audiomorons, who crave that stuff, not logical, rational folks. The irony of course, is that those same $cam addicts reject any form of honesty controls/blind testing as relevant (see latest Stereophile). So exactly how this BS paper will be sold to them is fascinating.
However, this is HA Amir, so as members, we in fact, do matter.

Get a sense of reality, conduct yourself more professionally and join the audiophiles elsewhere in increases the choice of formats we have.

You advising on getting a sense of reality is comical. No joining your camp for rational people and much $avings for the exact same sound quality music. $42 per album? Pleeease. 

Heaven knows I am getting bored interacting with you all.

With nearly 40,000 posts on just 2 forums, somehow I doubt that statement. The preponderance of the evidence suggests otherwise. 

cheers,

AJ
Loudspeaker manufacturer

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #873
Thinking about Eva Green listening to the recomposed 4 seasons is heaven!
Is troll-adiposity coming from feederism?
With 24bit music you can listen to silence much louder!

Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback

Reply #874
6. CD as a format will decline and go away as an option for your music purchases in a few years. There is no longer any reason to stamp plastic and spin it with a motor to read and play digital bits.  You will as sure as sun comes out the east, face the situation of wanting your favorite music yet it will only be available in MP3 or AAC.

Last night I went searching high and low to find the CD version of one of my favorite soundtrack composers, Max Richter's album: Perfect Sense: Original Film Soundtrack.  Yet Amazon only lists the stupid MP3 version.  This is the first time I have seen a movie soundtrack skip CD release.

Wake up and smell the coffee please.  You need to be 1000% in favor of more consumer choice.  You don't have to buy high-res but you better join me in supporting it as otherwise we will all be screwed with the first and biggest jump back in fidelity.

Wanna bet?

Amirm,
in my opinion the part I highlighted in your post in red is mere conjecture. Or worse, scaremongering.

Louspeakers have extremely different sounds; professional microphones have slightly different sounds (even before the positioning of the mike is considered). Where you sit in an auditorium (even a small auditorium to suit a chamber orchestra) has a pronounced effect on what you hear.

The music I like is classical, including opera. Why that would be released in the inefficient mp3 format is very unclear. If it were released as AAC (or some future more efficient codec) at a bitrate transparent for my ears I might feel a degree of dissatisfaction, but practically it would suffice. If indeed transparent for my ears.

I would be more interested in improvements in loudspeaker technology, possible improvements in use of multi-channel in recording and reproduction, and possible improvements in microphones used for recording, and mike placement and mixing.

These days many audiophiles are embracing room correction processing (Audyssey, etc). The effects of that would far, far outweigh any use of 16/44 in lieu of 24/96, or 32/384. There's also the question of acoustic treatments for rooms and partial soundproofing.

It is easy to focus on the question of high definition in the distribution format, as this is under the control of the party releasing or distributing the recording, and yet it is perhaps the least significant aspect of the whole process in terms of the audible result. No, I will go further: for stereo sound it is the least significant aspect impinging on sound quality, despite whatever doubts may have been raised in the BS paper under discussion in this thread of possible effects (apparenty at the outer limits of audibility).

To resort to the claim you have made at 6 in your post is to present a strategic, marketing related, argument that could conceivably have some weight or may have no validity at all! To compare it with the sun rising in the east is in my view hyperbole on a grand scale.

I would be very surprised if recordings of classical music and opera ceased to be available in either PCM format or lossless equivalents, and if they were instead released in a lossy form of compression only, I cannot see that being in a low bitrate mp3 version.  It it were lossy, it would be with an efficient codec, at a decent bitrate.

Actually I think the future of recorded classical music (including opera) is video with lossless audio, such as occurs already to some extent on Blu-ray. YouTube is so readily available that many people not attending live concerts are becoming accustomed to seeing music performed as well as hearing it. I am sorry if this post is a bit off-topic but I felt I couldn't let your claim at point 6 pass without challenge.