Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused).
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
was it blinded?
i saw the luthier was also the co author...
https://www.alphagalileo.org/en-gb/Item-Display/ItemId/173207/fbclid/IwAR2B9ZnJw3gJAjfpXDHlSVReC-y13x0QHU_4PvO3tOGDNk45Fxb79Ms-3NE?returnurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.alphagalileo.org%2Fen-gb%2FItem-Display%2FItemId%2F173207
Paper;
https://asa.scitation.org/doi/10.1121/1.5084735?fbclid=IwAR0Vfnb3IG3V27U2ECKpu8sZGTyuiwjsMTsQtGaMGuyD0e_GStDGaHiQgXc&
The paper provides some answers. (clues - welders goggles, dim light, retuning for each pass, pink noise.)
I've not seen another study with such a large number of subjects.
It's brave of RB to have taken part. It'll be interesting to see if it changes his approach to building.
The guitars
http://www.psych.lancs.ac.uk/hearing/the-guitar-experiment/
if you click on the graph, you can mess about with it to see elements of the data in more detail
That's interesting for me since I once had to sell on a walnut back+sides guitar since it was just too bright sounding for me as a player who uses nails a bit
They have looked mostly at the perception of the player.
I think they should have teamed up with an acoustics or physics dept, and measured and analysed the sound output
They could have engineered a repeatable plectrum pluck with a robot, and analysed the audio
(Also playing it back to listeners to rate)
Then we'd know if it was "all in the heads" of the players
Why did they use the Elixir 80/20? They are very bright jangly strings, not the normal choice for most people
I think these would make it a little harder to hear the different between guitars. I only use them on a baritone
The pro players were managing a d' of about 1.5, with the error bars topping out at 2. So no one was consistently or easily telling the guitars apart.
Other things it would be cool to see them do:
Get him to make 6 "identical" guitars and see how well or not those correlated.
Repeat the whole thing with a more typical lower-cost production line manufacture method.
Maybe they did...I haven't read it all.
As I say though - they've gone FAR further than anything else I've ever seen and for hand-built guitars at least it does throw up some very interesting questions.
Of course it is also possible to conclude that a good luthier can build out any effect of material - remains to be seen if the same is true for factory items.