My question is about the listening experience provided by the combination of headphones, ears and brains.
In another thread we stumbled across the intriguing fact that some of us hear completely different things. Using this ‘Aquapump’ recording http://www.dallassimpson.com/cdReleases.cfm for comparison purposes, we established that some of us experience headphone sound as almost a one dimensional thing with sound appearing to emanate from inside our skull, yet some experienced it as “as an immersive three dimensional thing”.
We can speculate that our very different experiences of the same recording are due to the structure of our ears, skulls, brain functions, etc or perhaps we are simply using the wrong headphones. If you find that different headphones influence the ‘3D’ experience, it would be useful to make that clear.
What I am interested to find out is…. What do other people hear? How do you hear it? Is it really 3D with left/right, up/down, front/back and distance cues or is it just vaguely 'spacious? Some of us may be missing out on what sounds like a fascinating illusion.
In another thread we stumbled across the intriguing fact that some of us hear completely different things. Using this ‘Aquapump’ recording http://www.dallassimpson.com/cdReleases.cfm for comparison purposes, we established that some of us experience headphone sound as almost a one dimensional thing with sound appearing to emanate from inside our skull, yet some experienced it as “as an immersive three dimensional thing”.
We can speculate that our very different experiences of the same recording are due to the structure of our ears, skulls, brain functions, etc or perhaps we are simply using the wrong headphones. If you find that different headphones influence the ‘3D’ experience, it would be useful to make that clear.
What I am interested to find out is…. What do other people hear? How do you hear it? Is it really 3D with left/right, up/down, front/back and distance cues or is it just vaguely 'spacious? Some of us may be missing out on what sounds like a fascinating illusion.
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