am afraid your mic placement is wrong. hence the phase cancelling and frequency lose and gain due to helix, antihelix, concha, triangular fossa and other part of pinna and acoustic meatus are missing. HRTF rule does require a dummy head , but a torso also otherwise the actual effet of 3d doesnt come it will feel like a bad A B miking technique ..
I always find it hard to differentiate between 'In front of you' sound and 'behind you' sound on these videos. It seems like the sound is approaching the front and then skips to the back. I don't know how the brain works out the difference in real life as the phase differences are the same. Maybe it's that sounds in front are crisper?? Maybe it has to do with the shape of the outer ear
@TimpBizkit The same thing happens to me. It's hard for me to tell the difference between sounds that are supposed to be on top of your head, in front of it or behind it. I have to concentrate to get it to sound like its in the place it should be.
@TimpBizkit It has a lot to do with the quality of your headphones. Most cheap (<$100) headphones have a terrible sound stage and you won't be able to hear a 3D sound fully "in front" of you - it mostly just sounds like it's on top and then right to the back as you described. A good (albeit expensive) pair of headphones will have a better sound stage and will more accurately portray 3D sound. I use a pair of AudioTechnica AD700 open-can headphones and they are far better than my old Sennheirsers
@jeeziss I got told by an acoustics professor that because everyone's ears are shaped slightly differently, and heads differ in width, a perfect binaural recording would be personal as the response change that triggers the difference between 'in front' and 'behind' and 'overhead' is tailored to the individual ears and head size. Although you should be able to get fairly good results with a generic ear shape.
@TimpBizkit lol, the easiest way to tell, is that the sounds behind you are muffled due to the shape of the ear. in front, it is much crisper and clear.
@Diorama42 Those recordings also work quite good on normal stereo-speakers if set up in the right way. But with a full surround setup there's no need for doing so.
Yes - nice.
Up, down, and all round.
Thumbs up!
AVD743 4 weeks ago
am afraid your mic placement is wrong. hence the phase cancelling and frequency lose and gain due to helix, antihelix, concha, triangular fossa and other part of pinna and acoustic meatus are missing. HRTF rule does require a dummy head , but a torso also otherwise the actual effet of 3d doesnt come it will feel like a bad A B miking technique ..
tjvarghese88 7 months ago in playlist harrysonsalophonic
@tjvarghese88 That's right.
BozzmusikAZAD 6 months ago
Put the camera in the head, lol
umpalumpa101909 1 year ago
Why the hell doesn't that bald chick move? That sparkler is right by her face!
DoesntTotallyGetIt 1 year ago
I always find it hard to differentiate between 'In front of you' sound and 'behind you' sound on these videos. It seems like the sound is approaching the front and then skips to the back. I don't know how the brain works out the difference in real life as the phase differences are the same. Maybe it's that sounds in front are crisper?? Maybe it has to do with the shape of the outer ear
TimpBizkit 1 year ago 13
@TimpBizkit The same thing happens to me. It's hard for me to tell the difference between sounds that are supposed to be on top of your head, in front of it or behind it. I have to concentrate to get it to sound like its in the place it should be.
Cgrrp 1 year ago
@TimpBizkit The same happens to me...
atsirik 1 year ago
@TimpBizkit It has a lot to do with the quality of your headphones. Most cheap (<$100) headphones have a terrible sound stage and you won't be able to hear a 3D sound fully "in front" of you - it mostly just sounds like it's on top and then right to the back as you described. A good (albeit expensive) pair of headphones will have a better sound stage and will more accurately portray 3D sound. I use a pair of AudioTechnica AD700 open-can headphones and they are far better than my old Sennheirsers
jeeziss 5 months ago
@jeeziss I got told by an acoustics professor that because everyone's ears are shaped slightly differently, and heads differ in width, a perfect binaural recording would be personal as the response change that triggers the difference between 'in front' and 'behind' and 'overhead' is tailored to the individual ears and head size. Although you should be able to get fairly good results with a generic ear shape.
TimpBizkit 5 months ago
@TimpBizkit lol, the easiest way to tell, is that the sounds behind you are muffled due to the shape of the ear. in front, it is much crisper and clear.
wrathvenge 1 month ago
AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH so good cant wait till movie theaters use this sound + 3d glases! gonna feel real
joelhoo1 2 years ago
This technic is old, and movie theaters don't use it, because they have surround setups.
huiuiuiui 2 years ago
@huiuiuiui they cant use it, its headphones only
Diorama42 1 year ago
@Diorama42 Those recordings also work quite good on normal stereo-speakers if set up in the right way. But with a full surround setup there's no need for doing so.
huiuiuiui 1 year ago
@joelhoo1 most movie theater have used surround sound since near the end of the 90's
MrPlaystationboy 6 months ago
Pretty cool, it's weird to actually see the sound being recorded in the video.
Cgrrp 2 years ago
Creepy. Thanks for the video demonstration. I can't find a pair of those anywhere. How do you like the D-50?
apesong 2 years ago