IM Distortion, Speakers and the Death of Science


One topic that often comes up is perception vs. measurements.

"If you can't measure it with common, existing measurements it isn't real."

This idea is and always will be flawed. Mind you, maybe what you perceive is not worth $1, but this is not how science works. I'm reminded of how many doctors and scientists fought against modernizing polio interventions, and how only recently did the treatment for stomach ulcers change radically due to the curiosity of a pair of forensic scientists.

Perception precedes measurement.  In between perception and measurement is (always) transference to visual data.  Lets take an example.

You are working on phone technology shortly after Bell invents the telephone. You hear one type of transducer sounds better than another.  Why is that?  Well, you have to figure out some way to see it (literally), via a scope, a charting pen, something that tells you in an objective way why they are different, that allows you to set a standard or goal and move towards it.

This person probably did not set out to measure all possible things. Maybe the first thing they decide to measure is distortion, or perhaps frequency response. After visualizing the raw data the scientist then has to decide what the units are, and how to express differences. Lets say it is distortion. In theory, there could have been a lot of different ways to measure distortion.  Such as Vrms - Vrms (expected) /Hz. Depending on the engineer's need at the time, that might have been a perfectly valid way to measure the output.

But here's the issue. This may work for this engineer solving this time, and we may even add it to the cannon of common measurements, but we are by no means done.

So, when exactly are we done?? At 1? 2? 5?  30?  The answer is we are not.  There are several common measurements for speakers for instance which I believe should be done more by reviewers:

- Compression
- Intermodulation ( IM ) Distortion
- Distortion

and yet, we do not. IM distortion is kind of interesting because I had heard about it before from M&K's literature, but it reappeared for me in the blog of Roger Russel ( http://www.roger-russell.com ) formerly from McIntosh. I can't find the blog post, but apparently they used IM distortion measurements to compare the audibility of woofer changes quite successfully.

Here's a great example of a new measurement being used and attributed to a sonic characteristic. Imagine the before and after.  Before using IM, maybe only distortion would have been used. They were of course measuring impedance and frequency response, and simple harmonic distortion, but Roger and his partner could hear something different not expressed in these measurements, so, they invent the use of it here. That invention is, in my mind, actual audio science.

The opposite of science would have been to say "frequency, impedance, and distortion" are the 3 characteristics which are audible, forever. Nelson pass working with the distortion profile, comparing the audible results and saying "this is an important feature" is also science. He's throwing out the normal distortion ratings and creating a whole new set of target behavior based on his experiments.  Given the market acceptance of his very expensive products I'd say he's been damn good at this.

What is my point to all of this?  Measurements in the consumer literature have become complacent. We've become far too willing to accept the limits of measurements from the 1980's and fail to develop new standard ways of testing. As a result of this we have devolved into camps who say that 1980's measures are all we need, those who eschew measurements and very little being done to show us new ways of looking at complex behaviors. Some areas where I believe measurements should be improved:

  • The effects of vibration on ss equipment
  • Capacitor technology
  • Interaction of linear amps with cables and speaker impedance.

We have become far too happy with this stale condition, and, for the consumers, science is dead.
erik_squires
@cleeds -

I'm talking about what we, the moderately informed consumer perceives.

Clearly, R&D proceeds and AES continues to publish.

Hence my clear caveat: "for the consumers" meaning what we read about and discuss.
Duke:

@audiokinesis

Don’t focus on distortion. Focus on us in consumer land (albeit educated consumer) having a limited number of measures and assuming we can’t have or use more.

Here I don't care about distortion, I used it as an example of how we invent specifications and measurements. I could have used gain instead for the example.

Best,

E
A metric which is demonstrably far more predictive of perception than THD has been figured out. It's called the GedLee Metric, but it has not yet gained widespread acceptance.
That seems interesting....Thanks...
Focus on us in consumer land (albeit educated consumer) having a limited number of measures and assuming we can’t have or use more. 


Why didn't you say so in the first place then. So now the question is, why would we want more measurements?

I mean, you just showed them to be arbitrary, and Duke showed at least one to actually be leading the wrong way. So why more measurements?

Seems to me all measurements do is create the illusion of objectivity, when in fact they are anything but. The very act of choosing which aspect to measure is subjective. The means of measurement, unit of measurement, and circumstances, these are all value judgments. Even the decision whether or not to consider double-blind testing appropriate or valuable is itself a subjective value judgment. One after another every single measurement boils down to being subjective, on top of inadequate. Why would anyone want even more of that?

I mean, I can understand a designer. Some guy like Duke or anyone trying to design something better, they need something to focus on to test their theory out on. So they do need to measure. But you didn't ask about that. You specifically target consumers. Seems to me the consumer will be a lot better off to accept the fundamental enduring inadequate nature of measurement and focus all their time and energy on the one thing that really does work and that they do have control over, and that is listening.