The invention of measurements and perception


This is going to be pretty airy-fairy. Sorry.

Let’s talk about how measurements get invented, and how this limits us.

One of the great works of engineering, science, and data is finding signals in the noise. What matters? Why? How much?

My background is in computer science, and a little in electrical engineering. So the question of what to measure to make systems (audio and computer) "better" is always on my mind.

What’s often missing in measurements is "pleasure" or "satisfaction."

I believe in math. I believe in statistics, but I also understand the limitations. That is, we can measure an attribute, like "interrupts per second" or "inflamatory markers" or Total Harmonic Distortion plus noise (THD+N)

However, measuring them, and understanding outcome and desirability are VERY different. Those companies who can do this excel at creating business value. For instance, like it or not, Bose and Harman excel (in their own ways) at finding this out. What some one will pay for, vs. how low a distortion figure is measured is VERY different.

What is my point?

Specs are good, I like specs, I like measurements, and they keep makers from cheating (more or less) but there must be a link between measurements and listener preferences before we can attribute desirability, listener preference, or economic viability.

What is that link? That link is you. That link is you listening in a chair, free of ideas like price, reviews or buzz. That link is you listening for no one but yourself and buying what you want to listen to the most.

E
erik_squires
To Hayakawa's maxims-
The word is not the thing
The map is not the territory
The flag is not the nation
Let us add:
The measurement is not the music.
It's correlation as a visually rendered reference so we can see deduce and predict what and how we think sound will behave.
It doesn't explain everything.

All the best,
Nonoise
Right and none have anything remotely resembling flat response like a good microphone used for measurements.
mapman"none have anything remotely resembling flat response like a good microphone"

Ears are not supposed to have flat response each ear is different.
You can forget about ears. The rooms are all different right off the bat. Even a given room sounds different depending on where you sit. Too many variables. Nobody said it was going to be easy. As Dylan says on the trailing wax of all his albums, good luck to you all.