prof and I are not confused, seem knowledgeable on the topic, and seem to write pretty much exactly the same thing (and both seem to have the same issue with the forum eating paragraph spacing).
All that needs to be tested "Is The Claim", and almost without fail, it is an individual making a claim that They hear something, or a vendor (or audiophile) making a claim that a Specific Group of People can hear something. We are testing their statement of claim, no more, no less, and that does not need random multiple subjects, nor does it even require multiple tests other than enough runs of a single test to rule out random chance.
All that needs to be tested "Is The Claim", and almost without fail, it is an individual making a claim that They hear something, or a vendor (or audiophile) making a claim that a Specific Group of People can hear something. We are testing their statement of claim, no more, no less, and that does not need random multiple subjects, nor does it even require multiple tests other than enough runs of a single test to rule out random chance.
cleeds2,544 posts11-12-2019 12:12pmIt’s odd how this topic often produces such illogic and convoluted responses.
Do you want to test a listener? Conduct a hearing test. Simple.
Do you want to test a claim, such as the audibility of a fuse? You’ll need multiple subjects in a controlled test and - ideally - multiple tests. Not so simple. That’s science, folks.