Transaction: 999a47f9fbd0cf9a0debafc93d48b94a43a46216

Included in block 18,344,446 at 2017/12/23 18:17:09 (UTC).

Transaction overview

Loading...
Transaction info
transaction_id 999a47f9fbd0cf9a0debafc93d48b94a43a46216
ref_block_num 59,885
block_num18,344,446
ref_block_prefix 3,720,812,506
expiration2017/12/23T18:27:06
transaction_num 30
extensions[]
signatures 1f0963a1dcdcd3e21a373864e7cb9cf9c2d7e0e3e5d2a8a141de4de24cfdeb226f72d9b6ed4e83021c60f3586ff6d2effe9ddeeac952fedd95de928ec98bd35edf
operations
comment
"parent_author":"",<br>"parent_permlink":"audio",<br>"author":"unlockyoursound",<br>"permlink":"how-we-localise-sound-in-the-stereo-field",<br>"title":"How we localise sound in the stereo field",<br>"body":"<h2>Interaural Intensity Difference<\/h2>\n\nThis is quite simple and easy to simulate on either headphones or speakers. Simply having a higher intensity of the same sound coming from one channel to the other,<br> localises it as such. If there is more of the same guitar coming from the left channel than the right,<br> our brains will localise that as further to the left whether we are monitoring on speakers or headphones.\n\nThe difference in intensity between the sound reach your left ear and your right,<br> isn\u2019t simply a matter of volume either. You have to consider the fact that by the time it\u2019s reach your right ear,<br> the head has masked it as well,<br> further distorting the sound in a way that is more tonal. This,<br> as well as interaural time difference are theoretically reasons why monitoring stereo between speakers and headphones are very different.\n\n<h2>Interaural Time Difference<\/h2>\n\nThis is fundamentally the reason why headphones don\u2019t produce a true stereo image. In the real world,<br> when a sound comes from the left,<br> the right ear hears the same thing,<br> just slightly later than the left ear does. Our brain uses this information (as well as IID) to localise the sound source. This difference in timing between left and right is known as interaural time difference. In headphones our left ear only hears the left channel and the right only hears the right. If you pan an instrument halfway to the left,<br> the right ear hears it also but with no variance in time like there would be with speakers.\n\nVia my blog post [Stereo,<br> Mono,<br> Mid,<br> Side,<br> Panning,<br> and Imaging Explained (http:\/\/unlockyoursound.com\/stereo\/)\n\nClaim your [Free Mix Review (http:\/\/unlockyoursound.com\/free-mix-feedback\/)",<br>"json_metadata":" \"tags\":[\"audio\",<br>\"stereo\",<br>\"sound\",<br>\"mixing\",<br>\"width\" ,<br>\"links\":[\"http:\/\/unlockyoursound.com\/stereo\/\",<br>\"http:\/\/unlockyoursound.com\/free-mix-feedback\/\" ,<br>\"app\":\"steemit\/0.1\",<br>\"format\":\"markdown\" "
* The API used to generate this page is provided by @steemchiller.