[net.audio] Phase distortion on music

grt@twitch.UUCP ( G.R.Tomasevich) (02/21/86)

> 1 (hack, cough, wheeze) speakers.  It wasn't that bad at low volume.
> However, most car stereo amplifiers have gross phase distortion (pull out
> your Ford factory radio and run a proof on it) as well as a frequency

The human ear is insensitive to phase and will not be affected by phase
distortion, provided the amplitude vs frequency characteristic is not altered.
The RIAA equalization for records produced horrendous phase shifts
at some frequencies, but we don't care.  We do speech processing here,
so we are aware of what one can do to speech, at least.  Some people in
this department have done 'hi fi' coding, too.  The cheap amplifiers have
other problems, probably including intermodulation distortion.
-- 
	George Tomasevich, ihnp4!twitch!grt
	AT&T Bell Laboratories, Holmdel, NJ

mat@mtx5a.UUCP (m.terribile) (02/24/86)

> > 1 (hack, cough, wheeze) speakers.  It wasn't that bad at low volume.
> > However, most car stereo amplifiers have gross phase distortion (pull out
> > your Ford factory radio and run a proof on it) as well as a frequency
> 
> The human ear is insensitive to phase and will not be affected by phase
> distortion, provided the amplitude vs frequency characteristic is not altered.

This is conventional wisdom.  And it's true -- phase distortions
are irrelevant to the intelligibility of speech, and to music so
long as other distortions predominate.  But in much of today's
really good equipment, other distortions do not always predominate.

Tests a while ago (someone know the actual reference) indicated that
phase distortions CAN cause subtle but audible changes in timbre when
they occur between about 100 and 2000 Hz, with the most sensitive
region being about 600 to 1200, if I recall.

You also mention the RIAA equialization doing violence to relative
phase.  Well, perhaps this is what the vinyl-over-CD freaks are
so used to? (or why Carver was able to measure funny differences
between vinyl and CD?)
-- 

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rdp@teddy.UUCP (02/24/86)

In a recent article, George Tomasevitch <ihnp4!twitch!grt> asserts:
> 
> The human ear is insensitive to phase and will not be affected by phase
> distortion, provided the amplitude vs frequency characteristic is not altered.
> The RIAA equalization for records produced horrendous phase shifts
> at some frequencies, but we don't care.  We do speech processing here,
> so we are aware of what one can do to speech, at least.  Some people in
> this department have done 'hi fi' coding, too.  The cheap amplifiers have
> other problems, probably including intermodulation distortion.
> -- 

Sorry, Mr. Heyser [1][2][3], sorry Mr. Fincham [4], sorry Mr. Lian [5], sorry
Herr Linkwitz,  sorry Messrs. Lipshitz, Pollock, and Vanderkooy [6]
and sorry to all those once capable researchers who had determined that
many kinds of phase shift are audible, Mr. Tomasevitch has, with the
flourish of keyboard, made the ear "insensitive to phase". Poor phase,
ears are no longer sensitive to it!

<technical flame on>

The example given, "RIAA equalization for records introduces horrendous
phase shifts at some frequencies, but we don't care" is ill chosen
and an obvious red herring.

First of all, the RIAA equalization does not produce "horrendous"
phase shifts, as the absolute magnitude of the phase shift never exceeds
90 degrees (no more than one pole  or zero in effect at any one time). 
Secondly, Note that the phase errors introduced should be the exact 
opposite of those impressed on the signal by the RIAA pre-equalization 
and playback characteristics of the reproduction system. The result is 
a net phase shift of 0 degrees across the audio band. Hence, the reason
we don't care about phase shift in RIAA networks is because there shouldn't
be any!

Much speech processing is done using mere spectral energy vs. time and,
in these measurements, phase is indeed not an issue (although I shan't
pretend to tell Mr. Tomasevitch about his business,  as he MAY know more
about it than I).

He may well be correct, in a very limited context, but 50 years of psycho-
acoustical research indicates that phase distortion is quite audible.
Certainly such a blanket pontification such as "the ear is insensitive
to phase" falls flat on its face in light of the well-demonstrated fact
that the ear needs very accurate phase information at midrange frequencies
to localize apparent sound sources [7] (this is how stereo works!).

I might be willing to swallow a statement such as, 

    "Under the conditions of high noise levels, ambiguous reverberent 
    fields and lacking the ability to sit in an optimum position, as 
    found in an automobile, and given the lack of attention of the 
    vast majority of radio stations and recording companies to issues 
    such as phase, and given that many car stereo systems have speakers 
    that have terrible phase characteristics, especially given typical 
    placement, I feel that other anomolies in the reproduction system 
    may have more significance than phase."

<technical flame on low, waiting for responses>

Dick Pierce

But a few references:

[1] Heyser, R. C., "Loudspeaker Phase Characteristics and Time Delay
    Distortions," J. Audio Eng. Soc., Part I - vol. 17, no. 1, pp.
    30, 1969 Jan., Part II - vol 17, no. 3, p. 130, 1969 Mar.

[2] Heyser, R. C., "The Delay Plane, Objective Analysis of Subjective
    Properties," J. Audio Eng. Soc. Part I - vol. 21, no.11, pp 609-
    701, 1973 Nov., Part II - vol. 21, no. 12, pp. 786-791, 1973 Dec.

[3] Heyser, R. C., "Determining the Acoustic Position for Proper Phase
    Response of Transducers," J. Audio Eng. Soc., vol. 32, no. 1, pp.
    23-24, 1984 Jan.

[4] Fincham, L. R., "The Subjective Importance of Uniform Group Delay at
    Low Frequencies," J. Audio Eng. Soc., vol. 33, no. 6. pp. 436-439, 
    1985 June.

[5] Lian, R., "Is Linear Phase Worthwhile?," presented at the AES Conv.,
    1981 May, preprint no. 1732.

[6] Lipshitz, S. P., Pollock, M., and Vanderkooy, J., "On the Audibility
    of Mid-Tange Phase Distortion in Audio Systems,", J. Audio Eng. Soc.,
    vol. 30, no. 9, p. 580, 1982 Sep.

[7] Moir, J. "Speaker Directivity and Sound Quality," Wireless World, vol.
    87, no. 1541, pp. 32-38, 1981 Feb.

spp@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU (Stephen P Pope) (02/27/86)

I don't remember the reference, but one psychoacoustic study
showed that, for speaker crossovers, the phase distorion was
found to be inaudible (under the condtions of this study)
so long as the frequency response is smooth in the region where
the phase change vs. frequncy was high.  If the frequency
response was uneven, the phase shift was very noticible.

Hence the conclusion, human hearing is insensitive to phase
shift if the frequncy response is flat.  However, this obviously
can't be generalized to the multiple radians of phase shift
found in the passband of a sharp-cutoff LPF, as the CD makers
have found out.

There's also the irrelevant fact that phase carries no information
in speech.

steve

ron@brl-smoke.ARPA (Ron Natalie <ron>) (02/28/86)

> > 1 (hack, cough, wheeze) speakers.  It wasn't that bad at low volume.
> > However, most car stereo amplifiers have gross phase distortion (pull out
> > your Ford factory radio and run a proof on it) as well as a frequency
> 
> The human ear is insensitive to phase and will not be affected by phase
> distortion, provided the amplitude vs frequency characteristic is not altered.
> The RIAA equalization for records produced horrendous phase shifts
> at some frequencies, but we don't care.  We do speech processing here,
> so we are aware of what one can do to speech, at least.  Some people in
> this department have done 'hi fi' coding, too.  The cheap amplifiers have
> other problems, probably including intermodulation distortion.

Well you telephone people's ear (singular) may be insensitive to phase,
but that makes up part of how we percieve sound direction.  In addition,
if you have two sound sources (like stereo, maybe?) their phase relative
to each other IS essential as making random changes is phase will cause
different perceived sounds when it's summed down into even your single
ear.

-Ron

mohan@topaz.RUTGERS.EDU (Sunil Mohan) (02/28/86)

In article <12077@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU> ...
> 
> ...  one psychoacoustic study
> showed that, for speaker crossovers ....
> ....  hearing is insensitive to phase
> shift if the frequncy response is flat.  However, this obviously
> can't be generalized ...
> 
> There's also the irrelevant fact that phase carries no information
> in speech.

Yes, but do all these studies that conclude phase carries no or little
info also consider DIRECTION of source as relevant information ?
 
Such a study  could  well be looking for  only likeness to live sound.
If the reproduced-sound source in the  experiments was monophonic, for
instance,  then  directionality  is   obviously not  being  taken into
account.  It  would be  interesting  to see  what the  'conditions  of
study' are for such experiments.

-- 
Sunil

UUCP:   ...{harvard, seismo, ut-sally, sri-iu, ihnp4!packard}!topaz!mohan
ARPA:   Mohan@RUTGERS

djb@riccb.UUCP (Dave J. Burris ) (03/01/86)

> 
> Tests a while ago (someone know the actual reference) indicated that
> phase distortions CAN cause subtle but audible changes in timbre when
> they occur between about 100 and 2000 Hz, with the most sensitive
> region being about 600 to 1200, if I recall.
> 

The keyword here is SUBTLE. Most source agree that a CONSTANT phase shift
is not distinguishable within X degrees (not sure of the number. I can attest
to the fact that phase cause timbre changes.

Can you say phase shifter?
Can you say flanger?
Can you say digital delay?

I knew you could!

-- 
Dave Burris
..!ihnp4!ihopa!riccb!djb
Rockwell Switching Systems, Downers Grove, Il.

levy@ttrdc.UUCP (Daniel R. Levy) (03/03/86)

<Oh oh here it comes.  Watch out boy, it'll chew you up! \
Oh oh here it comes.  The LINE EATER!  [Line eater]>

In article <12077@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU>, spp@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU (Stephen P Pope) writes:
>I don't remember the reference, but one psychoacoustic study
>showed that, for speaker crossovers, the phase distorion was
>found to be inaudible (under the condtions of this study)
>so long as the frequency response is smooth in the region where
>the phase change vs. frequncy was high.  If the frequency
>response was uneven, the phase shift was very noticible.
>Hence the conclusion, human hearing is insensitive to phase
>shift if the frequncy response is flat.  However, this obviously
>can't be generalized to the multiple radians of phase shift
>found in the passband of a sharp-cutoff LPF, as the CD makers
>have found out.
>There's also the irrelevant fact that phase carries no information
>in speech.
>steve

Way back when I was in undergrad EE, I learned that the effect of making
a phase shift in one component of some waveforms could, if the shift was
correct, cause the waveform to have extremely sharp (theoretically tend-
ing to infinity) peaks.  This would pose an obvious problem for the faith-
ful reproduction of those waveforms, even setting aside the issue of whether
it "sounds the same."  (Which I doubt it would, since it would push the
ear itself to mechanical extremes during the peaks.)  Note I am not saying
that the TOTAL ENERGY of the peaks tended to infinity (obviously impossible
when starting out with a signal of finite power) but just that the INSTANT-
ANEOUS (current, voltage, power) level did.
-- 
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