Tbg: If all you care about is finding a great speaker, why'd you start this thread???
All individuals are not the same. I never said they were. I think you're hung up on the idea of a hypothesis about what a majority of people can hear (in which case it would be necessary to test a random sample of all people). But the more common question in audio is, can anybody hear it? To answer that question in the affirmative, all you have to do is find *one* person who can hear a difference between two components. That's why testing a single individual can be appropriate. (Just remember that, in a single-person test, the null hypothesis relates to that single person; if he flunks, you can't conclude anything about anyone else.)
Here's a good example of the kind of testing that researchers do:
http://www.nhk.or.jp/strl/publica/labnote/lab486.html
Note that one of their 36 subjects got a statistically significant result. In a panel that large, this can easily happen by chance. The check this, they tested that individual again, and she got a random result, suggesting that her initial success was merely a statistical fluke.
All individuals are not the same. I never said they were. I think you're hung up on the idea of a hypothesis about what a majority of people can hear (in which case it would be necessary to test a random sample of all people). But the more common question in audio is, can anybody hear it? To answer that question in the affirmative, all you have to do is find *one* person who can hear a difference between two components. That's why testing a single individual can be appropriate. (Just remember that, in a single-person test, the null hypothesis relates to that single person; if he flunks, you can't conclude anything about anyone else.)
Here's a good example of the kind of testing that researchers do:
http://www.nhk.or.jp/strl/publica/labnote/lab486.html
Note that one of their 36 subjects got a statistically significant result. In a panel that large, this can easily happen by chance. The check this, they tested that individual again, and she got a random result, suggesting that her initial success was merely a statistical fluke.