The Placebo Effect


One of the things that should be taken into account in the evaluation of audio equipment, tweaks, etc is the Placebo Effect.

In the medical world, Placebos (open label or concealed) appear to mostly work on subjective symptoms, such as pain. They don’t work on an objective symptom — something a doctor could see or diagnose, such as a fracture on a bone. Placebos don’t shrink tumors, they don’t change your diabetes, and they’re not going to actually lower your blood pressure for more than 15 minutes, Basically, placebos appear to work on things that pass through the brain’s perceptual systems — where they can prompt the release of opioids and other endorphins (chemicals that reduce pain) in the brain. Bottom line, placebos can result in perceived improvement even where no actual improvement exists.

The same applies to our hobby. Probably too often, we sense improvement in SQ because of the Placebo Effect. Our money spent, hardware bias's, effective marketing, or being influenced by the experience of others (regardless if true), often have us believe that we have obtained improvements that don't really exist. This is not necessarily a bad thing because a perceived improvement, whether real or imagined is still an improvement to the listener. This may explain part of why certain "improvements" can't be measured. 

J.Chip
128x128jchiappinelli
"...wholly illiterate television (passive unthinking observation and taking in of things) of objectivity..."

What on Earth is illiterate television of objectivity?

The only thing I could figure out is that such a television started engineering in 1700s and that is why Germany still has the best technical schools in the world. Or is it that Bavaria has the best technical schools in Germany because they started it?

In any case, I desperately hope for an objective answer.
A few weeks later our repair tech notified us that he was replacing the circuit board in the unit, as it switched between the "A" and "B" lamps, but was only playing the amp connected to the "A" input, and that this was the case from the time the unit was installed.

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

You could have IF no one ever turned up the volume..

The switch scenario doesn’t work, different remotes and different volume pots, EVEN if they didn’t have remotes...

Sorry your wire swapper (wasn’t a tech) guy was blowing smoke.. Really..

Another hero at work.. seen a million of them... Let me guess he thought ALL cables sound the same..

Why not all amps do.. Funny guy..

Regards
glupson.....objectivity?  Here?!

When the Animal House roach-smoking atom under fingernail link came up, I fell out.....damn quantum universe......too much too many variables to consider...

....and then you throw humans into it.

*sheesh* ;)
@asvjerry  You should read Voltaire's "Micromegas": there is nothing new under (or over) the sun.
I remember when my subscription copy of Stereo Review, December 1987(?) came in the mail. It had an article called Do All Amplifiers Sound the Same?*. So the argument has been going on at least that long. In other words, it's not going away any time soon. Firm convictions are impossible or hard to break, as shown by the creationism vs. evolution debate.

https://web.archive.org/web/20060313071857/http://bruce.coppola.name/audio/Amp_Sound.pdf