Jakob, admittedly not having checked your test:

With which kind of cues “you”/your method would be able to distinguish between front and back directions?

I guess you need either some hrtf cues, or headtracking, or “moving sources”. (The fashionable 8/16/32D audio on YT; but a fashion which also seems to go away...)

Can you elaborate?

Speaking about “a new technique to enhance the localization of

sounds in binaural music”.

So what is “new”, in your case?

Best,

Stefan

- - -

----- Mensagem de Jakob Gille <jakob.gi...@freenet.de> ---------

 Data: Sun, 19 Dec 2021 16:51:56 +0100

 De: Jakob Gille <jakob.gi...@freenet.de>

 Assunto: Re: [Sursound] Into Sound - Headphone Localization Hearing Test

 Para: sursound@music.vt.edu

I recently finished the evaluation of the listening test I made about the effect of an oscillating sound source for the localization of sounds in binaural music.

I wrote a little paper about it. You can find it here:https://lnkd.in/eZsTJ6it





 Am 02.11.2021 um 12:34 schrieb Jakob Gille:

Thank you a lot for your comments!

I'm happy that I included also the option to add comments directly to the test because I got recently a lot of helpful input which I suppose was mostly coming from the sursound discussion group :)

Regarding the front/back confusion: unfortunately, this is still a huge problem, and I'm not sure if my method can help with that.

I would still encourage you to do the test and have your best and first guess if the signal is coming from the front or back. It still could be that the front/back confusion is overall really bad but maybe slightly better with my method.



I did not include hard left, right and center because my method is not really helping with the perception of these directions that are already quite good perceived.

Another reason was to have not too many questions for the test, thus keeping it short.





 Am 01.11.2021 um 13:00 schrieb Jon Honeyball:

Hmmmm



You need to have “left” “center” and “right” answers too – I stopped scoring because I was getting no meaningful front/back, and so my answers would have been invalid if I continued



 Jon



From: Sursound<sursound-boun...@music.vt.edu>  on behalf of Jakob Gille<jakob.gi...@freenet.de>

 Date: Monday, 1 November 2021 at 11:24

 To: Surround Sound discussion group<sursound@music.vt.edu>

 Subject: [Sursound] Into Sound - Headphone Localization Hearing Test

 For all the people interested in binaural audio:

 I'm currently working on a new technique to enhance the localization of

 sounds in binaural music.

 To further examine this, I created a hearing test. It would be great if

 a lot of people could participate to get representative results.

 So have fun listening to some Shakespeare and Drums and feel free to

 share the test!

 It only takes around 5 min.

 https://bit.ly/intosoundhearingtest <https://bit.ly/intosoundhearingtest>



 --

 Into Sound - Konzerte für dreidimensionale Musik

 https://intosound.de
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