Re: Computational ASA -- how many sources can humans perceive? (Brian Gygi )


Subject: Re: Computational ASA -- how many sources can humans perceive?
From:    Brian Gygi  <bgygi(at)EBIRE.ORG>
Date:    Fri, 30 Apr 2004 16:13:44 -0700

At 05:23 PM 4/30/2004 -0500, Valeriy Shafiro wrote: >It makes sense that being able to listen to a recording of a real-world >sound mixture or an orchestra more than once can help to identify >individual sound sources. However, when listening in real time how many >sound sources or instruments can we keep in the "foreground" of our >attention? I have not yet read the details of Huron's method, but his data >are based on testing 5 musicians (although I am not sure how that was >defined). Possibly some people are just so much better at it than others, >whether by nature or nurture. Supposedly one of the aspects of Glenn Gould's genius was that he could attend to four streams of conversation at once, and there is a neat scene in the film "32 Short Films about Glenn Gould" in which he is in a diner listening to several different conversations. The different streams are so skillfully edited that it really gave the feeling (for me, at least) of hearing them all simultaneously. What connection this has to his piano playing is not clear. One of the common reports of schizophrenics is that they hear several things going on at once and are unable to shut any of them out. There was a web site which tried to replicate this auditory experience for non-schizophrenics. It was quite disturbing. Sadly, I can't seem to locate that site anymore.


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