chemman
show you don’t understand scientific listening tests well at all.
No singular test is absolutely definitive, by the way, so you raising that issue is a bit of a red herring.
I understand the test very well.Statements such as:
... confirmation bias is not ordinarily found in an experiment that focuses on empirical data ...and:
... You can’t quantify listening skills ...
show you don’t understand scientific listening tests well at all.
"ranking listener acuity" is not empirical per se. You are assigning numbers to a qualitative result. You are attempting to control for variability by using a double-blind method of testing. The key is the word attempting. You are in no way controlling for human variability.Actually, you are very much controlling for human variability. That’s the purpose of the testing. Those who have used scientific, carefully controlled double-blind listening tests to design things such as audio codecs have done this with considerable success. You simply don’t know what you are talking about. You also seem rather obsessed with the word "empirical" without actually knowing what it means. It means something based on observation. That’s as opposed to based on theory, which is the basis of your argument.
Can knowledge be gleaned from such tests? Yes. Is it definitive? No.Oh, I agree absolutely. There are limits to the value of double-blind listening tests. But to understand those limits, it’s important to understand what they actually can do. That’s where you’re confused or, perhaps, just misinformed.
No singular test is absolutely definitive, by the way, so you raising that issue is a bit of a red herring.