Happy New Year to All,
I have to agree with Dave M. that the Acta Acustica united with Acustica
articles can be fiendishly expensive (Dave's words). As a student, I'm keeping
my fingers crossed that I can get these through inter-library loan. In some
instances, articles of interest can be found as a doctoral thesis /
dissertation and, consequently, available through a university at no charge. As
an example, I have a pdf copy of Sylvain Favrot's PhD thesis titled "A
loudspeaker-based room auralization system for auditory research." This thesis
(with some modifications) appeared as an article in Acta Acustica united with
Acustica. Similarly, a rather expensive book regarding transaural stereo
techniques by William Gardner can be found (in dissertation form) on MIT's
website. I certainly respect international copyright law, so I don't distribute
info I've obtained unless the publisher has given permission. It would be nice,
of course, to find affordable ways of accessing
information, particularly when the information isn't proprietary or being used
for commerical (profit) ventures. Should anyone know legal ways of obtaining
the Acta Acustica articles, or the information contained in them, I would be
most grateful for the help.
Kind regards,
Eric
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL:
<https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/private/sursound/attachments/20120109/7bcfe2d4/attachment.html>
_______________________________________________
Sursound mailing list
Sursound@music.vt.edu
https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound