This is my Conspiracy theory about why speaker companies and HiFi magazines don't use Blind people for
testing. I've heard that Blind people have a much better sense of hearing than people with sight.
Since they don't have sight ,a much bigger part of their brain is dedicated to hearing compared to people with sight (3%).
According to the following article,
Discover Magazine: The latest in science and technology news, blogs and articles - The Vision Thing: Mainly in the Brain
"In the brain itself, neurons devoted to visual processing number in the hundreds of millions and
take up about 30 percent of the cortex, as compared with 8 percent for touch
and just 3 percent for hearing."
So why are bind people not used for testing and validating speakers ? I bet it is because we use our sense of sight a lot more to cloud our judgement about how good or bad something is. For example there are a lot of food items we would never touch just because they look gross even though they might
taste great. I guess the same rules apply to speaker sound quality to speaker build finishes and size. A blind persons judgment about the performance of a speaker would be clear and deal only with the sound quality and have nothing with whether the speakers uses beryllium tweeter or have mirror piano finish.
If the HiFi magazines start using blind people the the real truth might come out about how a speaker really sounds.
What do you guys think ?
testing. I've heard that Blind people have a much better sense of hearing than people with sight.
Since they don't have sight ,a much bigger part of their brain is dedicated to hearing compared to people with sight (3%).
According to the following article,
Discover Magazine: The latest in science and technology news, blogs and articles - The Vision Thing: Mainly in the Brain
"In the brain itself, neurons devoted to visual processing number in the hundreds of millions and
take up about 30 percent of the cortex, as compared with 8 percent for touch
and just 3 percent for hearing."
So why are bind people not used for testing and validating speakers ? I bet it is because we use our sense of sight a lot more to cloud our judgement about how good or bad something is. For example there are a lot of food items we would never touch just because they look gross even though they might
taste great. I guess the same rules apply to speaker sound quality to speaker build finishes and size. A blind persons judgment about the performance of a speaker would be clear and deal only with the sound quality and have nothing with whether the speakers uses beryllium tweeter or have mirror piano finish.
If the HiFi magazines start using blind people the the real truth might come out about how a speaker really sounds.
What do you guys think ?