From: BenFed express (benfed@intraversal.de)
Date: Sun Sep 19 2010 - 14:59:40 EDT
Thank you very much for the offer, John! For Blauert, I will take a look
into our library as soon as I find some spare time... (whenever that
will be)
.b
Am 19.09.10 20:50, schrieb John Kamevaar:
> if you are interested and your university library doesn't have it,
> etc. - send your address offline and i'll send it by post
> On 2010-09-19, at 2:29 PM, BenFed express wrote:
>
>>
>> Thanks, sounds promising. Do you have a download link to that pdf?
>> Google finds a pdf document with the same name, different author
>> though...
>>
>> .b
>>
>>
>> Am 19.09.10 20:10, schrieb Peiman Khosravi:
>>> Take a look at Blauert's Spatial Hearing. And Henriksen's thesis
>>> /Space in Electroacoustic Music /(pdf available online).
>>>
>>> P
>>>
>>>
>>> On 19 Sep 2010, at 15:28, BenFed express wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Interestingly my acoustics book only has numbers for horizonzal
>>>> (3°) and vertical (10°) but not for median(?) movements. The topic
>>>> is discussed briefly in it, unfortunately. It only says something
>>>> about linear distortions of frequency. That would be something one
>>>> could work with, at least.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> As I recall, the JND (just noticeable difference) in the front can
>>>>> be as low as about 3 degrees, while at the side it may be as low
>>>>> as 15 degrees. I would need to look this up to get the exact [sic]
>>>>> numbers.
>>>>>
>>>>> With the sound coming from my left side, other sounds in the
>>>>> environment had a much greater masking impact. I have found that
>>>>> much 'side motion' is very contextual.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>>
>>>> www.intraversal.de <http://www.intraversal.de/>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>
-- www.intraversal.de <http://www.intraversal.de>
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