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RE: a woman's ears
Thanks to both of you for this msg, it says alot. I think a lot of
things play into this whole idea, hearing differences, personal preference,
individual threasholds, quality of systems, type and style of music,
volume... etc...
smiles, and happy listening...
Corynne
te:
>Kim illumined:
>>Just so's you know.....As I understand the physiological issue, it's
>>not
>volume or high frequencies that cause the discomfort in women. >It's
particular
>types of non-harmonic distortion in the audio system, >which will tend to
>be
>worse at higher volume. I've seen several >discussions of this in audio
>engineering journals, usually under the >context of how to get a wider
customer
>base for audio products.
>
>Hmmm. This is really interesting. What are these types of n-h
>distortion
>called? (So I can find out more about this.) Also, a question comes to
mind
>regarding human sensitivity in detecting distortion. Assuming we're
>talking
>about musicians or people with well-trained, discriminating hearing: is
there
>inharmonic distortion occurring below the range of conscious perception
>that
>affects us negatively before we actually are aware of hearing it? Might
>I
>start feeling uncomfortable before I am able to consciously identify this
type
>of distortion, even if I was somehow miraculously blessed with a superbly
>sophisticated ear? (My question comes in part from reading about phase
>distortion in amplifiers or equalizers. My text source tells me the
associated
>slight reduction of response is generally not noticeable. Does it,
>however,
>have any measurable effect on the listener, even when not audibly
>perceived?)
>
>I'm also curious about lab standards by which something as subjective as
>perception is meaningfully quantified. Can anyone recommend a good source
for
>info on that one?
>
>>These inharmonic distortions add frequency components to the >sound in a
>particular way that women tend to have a negative >reaction to while men
>typically don't notice.
>
>Sarajane's post mentioned differences in inner ear structure between
genders.
> Is that the mechanism in this case?
>
>>It is very common with cheap home/audio stereos, cheap PA >systems,
>cheap
>music gear, etc. It also happens in more expensive >gear that isn't
>designed
>very well. As the volume is turned up on these >systems, the distortions
start
>to happen, and women will start to find it >unpleasant for physiological
>reasons. On cleaner systems that don't >generate these distortions, the
>discomfort doesn't happen.
>
>[snip]
>
>On a few occasions, the systems were pretty clean, high end. On the
>other
>hand, as I recall, I wasn't necessarily the only one suffering; some of
>the
>boyz were also getting blasted. Which probably just means that those of
>us
>copping to pain weren't trying to be as macho, we hadn't already toasted
>our
>eardrums, or we simply weren't as hell-bent on vaporizing ourselves out
>of
>existence...
>
>Maybe it's just a difference in individual thresholds. I've run across a
very
>few musicians who consistently choose to play at *significantly* higher
volumes
>than most (regardless of gender), yet have no detectable hearing loss
>after
>years and years of totally cranking their systems, and practically
stuffing 10
>inch speakers in their ears. (They also manage to drive everybody else
>on
>stage totally nuts!) -- And hey, talk about incompatibilities in a
>relationship... ;-)
>
>Anyway, thanks for the clarification, Kim. Very useful info.
>
>laurie
>
>
>
>