Visual Confirmation Bias


Nice term, Paul. Very impressive. Very scientific.

And original. Well, at least I’ve never seen it before so I’m going to claim it as my own.

Visual Confirmation Bias (VCB) is a variation on confirmation bias that postulates that your brain causes audio gear, particularly speakers, to sound the way they look.

I came up with this idea a week ago when I got my new (used) KEF LS50s. (Note: I’m sure that dozens of people have been talking about VCB for a hundred years. I’m not particularly interested in who preceded me but raising points like that is one of the reasons that this forum exists.)


I had read lots about the speaker and I was expecting accuracy and soundstage precision. Their rich, full sound surprised me. These were not adjectives that were usually attached to these speakers.

I’ve been obsessed with these speakers for the past week, reading about them constantly. I find myself most in agreement with The Absolute Sound, which described the speakers—just after they were released—as possessing a “prevailing sweetness, a harmonic saturation that lends it a dark, velvety overall character, and a bloom that is so pleasing that I began affectionately dubbing it the butterscotch sundae of small monitors.”


But in the years that followed, listener after listener reported a “hard” “bright” sound. And when I look at the speaker, those words make complete sense. A tiny metallic driver in a small box? They look tinny and bright so no wonder some people hear that.

My own strongest experience with VCB: Many years ago, on the pretense of looking for a CD player, I walked into Sound By Singer at its old 16th St. location. After just enough feigned interest, I asked the salesman to listen to something “really pornographic.”

Surprisingly, he was happy to take me into one of the listening rooms. The only specific piece of equipment I remember was a pair of Wilson Speakers. I don’t know which model but they were white and just over six feet tall. Each the size of a restaurant-grade refrigerator. They were somewhere in the neighborhood of $250,000.

Then I settled into the listening chair as the salesman started turning stuff on. Preamp, monoblock, monoblock, God knows what else. I just remember him throwing switch after switch. I have to believe all that gear equaled the price of the speakers.

If ever a system should have disappeared, it was this one. If ever the music should have been revealed to me, it was now. But even with my eyes closed, all I could see—and all I could hear—were these huge speakers looming over me. They could not have been more present in my listening experience.

Visual confirmation bias kept me from enjoying the finest pair of speakers that I’ll probably ever hear. The phenomenon is not to be underestimated.
paul6001
Actually, It's generally accepted that smell is our strongest sense.
But, hardly applicable here unless you're into sniffing your gear.

And I see miller is still making friends wherever he goes...
"...Visual Confirmation Bias (VCB) is a..."

A temporary condition that is eliminated with long term evaluation. Playing a wide selection of music over time eliminates any preconceived notions. Unless you are a slow learner, long term evaluation will show a loudspeakers strengths and weaknesses, you can only fool yourself for so long before reality overrides your initial impressions. 
Long term evaluation is the only way to learn what a system is delivering, and it's pretty much an industry standard.     
A temporary condition that is eliminated with long term evaluation.
exactly...




Our vision is our most powerful sense, i

This is not true....Like usual you generalyze something out of his sphere to suit your opinion about biases...

The most powerful sense is hearing....

It is the last to go out...

It is the only one sense that link us to people around us in a coma...

In alzheimer patient it is music that ressuscitate them for a while not visual perception...


In the mother body you listen voices and music you do not see....

With sound we can see like bat or dolphins, some blind people demonstrate it easily; but with light we dont listen music or perceive sounds.... Save in exceptional synesthesia phenomenon where a sound is PASSIVELY associated with a color....But there is no ACTIVE concrete perception of sounds with light like perception of concrete forms with sound beam produced by a bat or a blind....





«OM is the original sound, before the universe OM is»- A rishi

«In the beginning is the logos»- in French we translate it by the word "verbe" like the english word "verb"....

Logos in greek is a very complex concept untranslatable in our languages, it means something unifying and transcending reality, language and thinking....It is an act....

«In the beginning was the act»- Goethe’s Faust....
We all have biases it doesn't matter how long you listen to something you simply grow accustomed to it and when some small change is made it's assumed the sound changes without using proper controls to account for our biases. Some here seem to think they're immune to this most basic human condition. They suffer from Anosognosia.
Nobody in his right mind can except himself from biases...

The problem is when some people with BLINDERS use biases to explain ALL incremental continuous changes in a set of experiment in acoustic control for example or with the many modifications possible about the audio gear...

Think a little more than few seconds please....Before insulting....