dw wrote:
http://www.gbcasa.org/cms/audio/Griesinger-Binaural-Hearing-EarCanals-Headphones.ppt
http://www.stereophile.com/content/spacethe-final-frontier-letters-2
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/researchanddevelopment/2013/03/listen-up-binaural-sound.shtml
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/researchanddevelopment/2013/03/listen-up-binaural-sound.shtml
http://www.davidgriesinger.com/Acoustics_Today/Pitch,%20Timbre,%20Source%20Separation_talk_web_sound_3.pptx
http://homepages.nyu.edu/%7Ear137/Publications/AES131_HRTFformat_final.pdf
Now combine these with the fact that each ear gets the superposition of the HRIRs from each speaker position, convolved with the headphone response. The result is not going be the HRIR of a real sound at the source position, except for in the low frequency region.
Thanks for those, the Pitch Timbre one looks especially interesting, though I've only had a quick look so far. I had seen the BBC one, and on the issue of in front being hard can totally agree from my own tests :-). I was hoping that this software would have appeared, as I have access to a kinect - It would be nice to see if it was any good and actually helped. http://www.matthiaskronlachner.com/?p=1723 http://www.matthiaskronlachner.com/?p=624 ATK does give access to CIPIC and Listen, though finding one that's "close enough" is time consuming and I haven't tried with CIPIC yet. Listen at least have some pre-made 2D wavs to audition - still tricky to choose, but some are if not in front at least less in the head. ATK also does synthetic spherical heads, 2D only of course, but seem OK with UHJ music. Of course having never heard a proper ambisonic setup I don't know what I'm missing. Thanks again for taking the time. _______________________________________________ Sursound mailing list Sursound@music.vt.edu https://mail.music.vt.edu/mailman/listinfo/sursound