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The Audibility of Typical Digital Audio Filters in a High-Fidelity Playback System

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This paper describes listening tests investigating the audibility of various filters applied in high-resolution wideband digital playback systems. Discrimination between filtered and unfiltered signals was compared directly in the same subjects using a double-blind psychophysical test. Filter responses tested were representative of anti-alias filters used in A/D (analog-to-digital) converters or mastering processes. Further tests probed the audibility of 16-bit quantization with or without a rectangular dither. Results suggest that listeners are sensitive to the small signal alterations introduced by these filters and quantization. Two main conclusions are offered: first, there exist audible signals that cannot be encoded transparently by a standard CD; and second, an audio chain used for such experiments must be capable of high-fidelity reproduction.

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Stefan Heinzmann


Comment posted December 19, 2014 @ 16:26:18 UTC (Comment permalink)

I see a number of problems with the paper, some of which are:

  • The conclusions in the abstract and in the introduction differ markedly from those offered at the end of the paper. They are also not adequately supported by the research presented in the paper.
  • The introduction contains a lengthy series of speculations which seem to be preoccupied with casting doubt on some past research, yet the paper essentially fails to substantiate the speculations. This comes dangerously close to being unfair.
  • The criticism of the ABX test procedure that is offered in the introduction is poorly justified. The "cognitive load", as called by the authors, is entirely under the control of the listener in an ABX test, since the listener selects when to switch and what to switch to. There is no requirement to keep all three sounds in memory simultaneously, as criticised by the authors. Consequently, it is unclear what advantage the method chosen by the authors offers over an ABX test. Furthermore, the informal use of the term "cognitive load" seems to suggest tacitly, that a higher "load" is detrimental to the ability to distinguish between different sounds. I'm not aware of any study that confirms that. Indeed, one could just as easily suspect the opposite, namely that the availability of more sounds would increase this ability. Neither of those suggestions can of course be taken for granted. The authors shouldn't appeal to their interpretation of common sense when criticising a test method, and rely on testable evidence instead.
  • The quantization to 16 bit was accompanied by either no dither, or RPDF dither. As the authors rightly state, neither is satisfactory, a well-known fact. However, using nonoptimal test conditions defeats the aim of showing deficiencies of the CD-format itself. If artefacts are uncovered with this setup, they may be attributed to the test conditions rather than the format. This means that the conclusion drawn by the authors, regarding the CD-format, is unjustified by the result of their research. If the CD-format as such is under scrutiny, the aim must be to remove all other factors as much as possible. This rings especially dissonant with the authors' criticism of the work of others offered in the introduction.
  • While the usage of no dither or RPDF dither was justified with a reference to alleged deficiencies of some real-world implementations of converters, the authors chose unusually high cut-off frequencies in their lowpass filters. This can only make it more likely that any uncovered artefacts are due to the test conditions, and not due to the CD format. Again, the authors ought to make clear whether they want to address deficiencies of real world implementations, and if so direct their conclusions at those implementations, or whether they want to address deficiencies of a format, in which case they should attempt to exclude or reduce the deficiencies of real-world implementations from their test setup as much as possible.

Hence I conclude: The research that is presented in this paper shows evidence that supports conclusions 1 and 2 at the end of the paper. I don't see how it supports conclusions 3 and 4, which appear speculative to me. Conclusion 5 isn't actually a conclusion, it rather seems to describe a preconception of the authors, which affected their design of the test procedure. I don't see any attempt on their part to investigate to what extent this preconception is actually valid.

Of the two main conclusions offered at the end of the abstract and the end of the introduction, neither are supported by the research, indeed the tests conducted were not designed to address those questions. That doesn't make the conclusions automatically false, but it casts serious doubts on the authors' interpretation of their own findings.

Kind regards

Stefan Heinzmann


Amir Majidimehr
Amir Majidimehr


Comment posted March 13, 2015 @ 16:45:09 UTC (Comment permalink)

This is in response to Mr. Heinzmann's comments.  While I think the paper could stand a bit more clarity on its positions and nature of testing, the comments below by Mr. Heinzmann can be addressed:

>>> The criticism of the ABX test procedure that is offered in the introduction is poorly justified. The "cognitive load", as called by the authors, is entirely under the control of the listener in an ABX test, since the listener selects when to switch and what to switch to. There is no requirement to keep all three sounds in memory simultaneously, as criticised by the authors. 

While there may not be a requirement that is what is routinely done by listeners.  The instructions for ABX tests usually specify listening to A, then B followed by X and determine if X matches A or B.  Intuitively then, the user will attempt to do the same by trying to remember all three stimuli.  A trained listener may not follow such instructions (see below) but such were not used in the test, nor would that represent the general public who would take such tests.  They will try to listen to all three clips, and if differences are small, struggle to tell if X is a better match to A or B.  Therefore the cognitive load is most definitely there and needs no proof of its existence.

>>>Consequently, it is unclear what advantage the method chosen by the authors offers over an ABX test. 

Actually the test used by authors can be thought of an ABX test with better instructions.  One can always listen to A, disregard B, and vote whether X matches A or not.  And in doing so, have the ABX test behave exactly as was done in the paired comparisons used in this research.  In that sense, both the authors’ comments and Mr. 
Heinzmann's are moot.  What was run was an ABX test albeit, optimized so that the listener was not asked to do more work than necessary.

>>>Furthermore, the informal use of the term "cognitive load" seems to suggest tacitly, that a higher "load" is detrimental to the ability to distinguish between different sounds. I'm not aware of any study that confirms that. 

>>> Indeed, one could just as easily suspect the opposite, namely that the availability of more sounds would increase this ability. Neither of those suggestions can of course be taken for granted. The authors shouldn't appeal to their interpretation of common sense when criticising a test method, and rely on testable evidence instead.

The research is plainly there in the form of capacity of short-term auditory memory which is measured in seconds.  Any test that spills over that capacity, will force the listener to rely on longer term memory which is far less precise.  When differences get small, we must do everything we can to enable the listener to utilize short-term memory.  It is for this reason for example that very short music segments are used in MPEG reference test clips for test of lossy audio codecs.  More is not better at all.  I welcome Mr.
Heinzmann presenting his research that more is better.

 >>>The quantization to 16 bit was accompanied by either no dither, or RPDF dither. As the authors rightly state, neither is satisfactory, a well-known fact. 

You mean from audibility point of view?  If so, that is not well-known fact or better said, remotely accepted fact by skeptics.  This test for the first time demonstrates that conversions to 16 bits using rectangular dither or truncation could very well be audible in double blind controlled listening tests.  Until now, such small differences were routinely considered to be inaudible.  If we now take such results as well-known fact, then we have taken a large step forward in bridging the gap between the believers and non-believers in high-resolution audio.

>>>However, using nonoptimal test conditions defeats the aim of showing deficiencies of the CD-format itself. If artefacts are uncovered with this setup, they may be attributed to the test conditions rather than the format. This means that the conclusion drawn by the authors, regarding the CD-format, is unjustified by the result of their research. If the CD-format as such is under scrutiny, the aim must be to remove all other factors as much as possible. This rings especially dissonant with the authors' criticism of the work of others offered in the introduction.

Two requirements are imposed by CD format: 44.1 KHz sampling and 16-bit quantization.  The former was tested by itself.  192 KHz/24-bit content was filtered down to 22.05 KHz while keeping the bit depth at 24-bits with TPDF dither. That one processing which is a mandatory pre-requisite of mastering for CD, was found to be audible with better than 95% confidence.  It matters not then what the additional step of quantization to 16 bit does.  The “damage” was already done in the filtering and the war of transparency lost.

Also keep in mind that the CD spec does not mandate a specific re-quantization. As such, you have no idea what conversion was used to 16 bits in music one buys.  Anything from truncation to noise-shaped TPDF dither may be used and everything in between.  So unless you can represent that large amount of music one buys in CD format is using optimized dither, then as a practical matter that criticism is of limited value. 

The only way to be assured of transparency is to get the originally mastered stereo track prior to filtering and re-quantization.   Anything else can mean some audible compromise.  That is what this paper directionally shows and the high-level, take away message.

 

 


John Stuart
Author Response
John Stuart


Comment posted March 16, 2015 @ 13:49:34 UTC (Comment permalink)

This is in response to the comments from Messrs Heinzmann and Kreuger.

 

We would like to address them here in advance of publishing further experimental data in this area.

 

You are correct that the concluding remarks move beyond the abstract and, to an extent, this reflects the fact that the abstract was submitted some time ahead of the paper. As noted in the Summary (4.4), this is a report of a pilot in an ongoing study.

 

We do not agree with the comments relating to the introduction. The central question in this paper was to determine whether the addition of certain low-pass filters could be detected in an audio chain. We do emphasise in the introduction the necessity to ensure that the filter under test should narrow the overall system bandwidth. It seems logical that the playback system should be wideband and documented, that the signal should have known provenance, be repeatable and be of suitable quality, and that there should only be one change made in the signal path between test conditions. Any criticism of any of the 6 listening tests referred to rested only on these points or the absence of such information.

 

Regarding the choice of psychophysical test: we chose to use the 1AFC (one-alternative forced-choice) same-different (AX) paradigm, one of many double-blind forced-choice paradigms that are appropriate to the task in hand, that is, where the basis on which listeners discriminate the stimuli does not need to be known a priori. Other possible options included the 2AFC (two-alternative forced-choice) ABX paradigm and the 4IAX (four-interval AX) paradigm, a 2AFC version of AX, in which a listener must decide which of two stimulus pairs contains a difference. Pre-testing indicated that listeners found our test in any paradigm quite difficult, and their feedback indicated that they preferred fewer intervals per trial due to finding the task tiring. This could have been due to the signals we used being fairly long, lasting around ten seconds each; often where ABX is used in psychophysics the stimuli are tones, noises or speech-sounds like vowels, each lasting only a few seconds or even milliseconds. 4IAX was found to be nearly unusable for this task.

 

It is not uncommon to believe, as we do, that the ABX test is “hard” for listeners, and hence possibly sacrifices some sensitivity and reliability over simpler tasks such as same-different (AX, see Lass 1984, Crowder 1982). For example, Pisoni (1975) compared results from ABX and 4IAX in the same subjects for short speech-stimuli, and found that the 4IAX invariably gave smaller threshold estimates. However, we accept that the use of the term “cognitive load” was perhaps over-reaching as we used it.

 

One problem that exists with the 1AFC version of the AX test, as we employed, is that of potential bias in the results due to the internal decision criterion of a particular listener. Although in this paper we grouped the subjects together and analysed performance using the binomial distribution, in the future we will consider adding analysis methods from signal detection theory (analysing hits, misses, correct rejections and false alarms) to measure and adjust for this. This was not possible for the data collected here as the sample size was not large enough.

 

The empirical observation remains that our listeners could discriminate filtered from unfiltered signals at a level above chance for five out of six conditions (with a risk of Type I errors of 1 in 20) and that significant (p<0.05) effects of all parameters were found in the results for the high-yield sections. We find it hard to see how these observations could arise from any other interpretation than sensitivity to our signal processing. As our experiments progress, we will be interested to see if our tentative conclusions are supported by new data.

 

Turning to the comments on dither: we know that in order to approach transparency TPDF is the minimum that should be accepted. A quick search of the AES library shows three papers by Stuart (one of the present authors) on this very topic, including the use of noise-shaping. Our paper states that the core test carried out here, namely the introduction of a filter into a 192-kHz 24-bit channel, used TPDF at the LSB in the filter.

 

As stated in the paper, we added the 16-bit quantisation as a probe, mostly out of curiosity, because we were aware that certain converters have used sub-optimal dither in their multistage filter chains in an attempt to preserve signal/noise ratio. The quantisation and dither tests were reported for information but are not central to the point of the paper. The sampling process traditionally requires bandwidth limiting, instantaneous sampling and quantisation. We aimed to determine if the first step alone could be detected, although we reported and commented on the quantisation. We did not set out to examine the CD format as such; however the fact that a band-limiting filter at 22 kHz was detectable in the 24-bit context should give some pause for thought. The choice of 192-kHz content was to ensure that the band-edge of filters used in the recording and for reconstruction in the DAC was sufficiently removed from that of the test filter.

 

Regarding the specific criticisms of the conclusions: Point 1, 2 and 4 (some segments of the music made the filter easier or harder to detect) are supported by our findings, and 4 particularly by reports of listeners telling us what they listened for. Point 3 is perhaps worded unhelpfully generally, but it is not untrue that our results are consistent with such a temporal smearing hypothesis; we do not claim that our results support this hypothesis. Point 5 was intended to lead to further work, and the criticism addressed above regarding the use of the term “cognitive load” is acknowledged.

 

As stated earlier, we have continued this series of experiments using different filters (including both shorter and minimum-phase designs) and will be reporting these findings in the near future.

 

 

Dr Helen Jackson, Dr Michael Capp and Bob Stuart

 

References:

 

Crowder, R.G. (1982) A common basis for auditory sensory storage in perception and immediate memory. Perception & Psychophysics. Sep;31(5). p477-483. doi:10.3758/BF03204857.

 

Pisoni, D.B. (1975) Auditory short-term memory and vowel perception. Memory & Cognition. Jan;3(1). p7-18. doi:10.3758/BF03198202.

 

Lass, N.J. (ed.) (1982) Speech and Language: Advances in Basic Research and Practice, Vol. 10. London: Academic Press Inc. 


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Stefan Heinzmann


Comment posted March 27, 2015 @ 19:56:12 UTC (Comment permalink)

Thank you, Mr. Stuart, for the clarifications. Let me add one of my own before going into the details: I didn't intend to say that the conclusions of the paper go beyond those in the abstract. They are simply different, and if anything, I would tend to say the opposite, namely that the conclusions in the abstract go beyond those in the paper. My main criticism, however, is that they are not adequately supported by the research presented. I am looking forward to seeing your further research that you say will close this gap.

Apart from this, there are two main topics which I would like to address in turn. The first is the criticism aimed at the ABX test method, and the second is your choice of filter charateristics.

I was under the misapprehension, that you were criticising the ABX test method as used in more recent times. The answer by Mr. Krueger, and your choice of references that you provided with your answer, makes it very plausible that you are actually criticising a form of ABX test where the A, B and X stimuli are presented once in this order, and the listener, who has no influence on the test, is then asked whether X was A or X was B. In this case, it is understandable why you are concerned about the strain on the listener. Here, it is indeed necessary for the listener to remember the sounds in order to compare them.

I was not aware that this primitive form of ABX testing was still being used widely, particularly when trying to identify subtle differences. Improved ABX testing procedures and corresponding hardware support have been known and used for decades, which allow the listener to switch at will between A,B and X any number of times and at any point in time, and indeed your own test method allowed for the same, except of course for the lack of a stimulus B. It was your discussion of the Meyer/Moran experiment in particular, which led me to believe that you were actually criticising their way of doing ABX. Not so, as I realize by now.

It does, however, beg the question why you didn't simply resort to a more modern form of ABX, which doesn't have the problems you suspect, instead of dismissing it entirely. In any case, the question whether "modern" ABX is inferior to other approaches, such as yours, remains unanswered, whilst the criticism you have aimed at ABX has been addressed a long time ago by introducing ABX switching hardware operated by the listener.

Regarding the second topic, namely the choice of filter characteristics, I have to support Mr. Krueger. I tried to find A/D converter chips amongst my collection of data sheets, which offered a transition band as narrow as the one you used for your experiment. Apart from a chip by ESS which had a freely programmable decimator, I only encountered wider transition bands, even when the chips offered several choices. It was only a cursory look, perhaps a more thorough search would have uncovered some more examples, but I don't understand how you come to your opinion that your choice represents a typical situation encountered in the field. My own perception of the market has been for quite some time now, that the transition bands have become wider, sometimes beyond the point where I would find the risk of aliasing effects to be justifiable. So my fear is that the market is more likely to err on the side of too wide a transition band.

Your research is of course valuable in showing that too narrow a transition band may have a negative effect, too. If this leads to a realization of what transition band is "right" for which given sampling rate, it can only advance the state of the art. My own feeling, however, is that the existing converter chips are in their majority already quite close to this best choice. Yet I would find it most welcome to investigate the root cause of the differences that your experiment found audible. You offer some hypotheses that would need substantiation.

I still believe that you are making way too much of your findings. It is far from clear that your result can be seen as pointing towards a deficiency of the CD format. If you weren't implying to judge the format as such anyway, as you say, your wording of the abstract and of the introduction was certainly unhelpful. This is also evidenced by the public reaction it has attracted. I hope that this can and will be put right in the upcoming episodes.

Kind regards

Stefan Heinzmann


Amir Majidimehr
Amir Majidimehr


Comment posted June 8, 2015 @ 00:29:01 UTC (Comment permalink)

It is puzzling to read continued concerns by Mr. Heinzmann regarding AX testing used in the reserach.  As I explained in my original post, I can choose to listen to A and X exclusively in any ABX and ingore B.  In that regard, AX testing in this research is a form of ABX, albeit an optimized one.

What AX testing is doing, is to take away the option from the tester to listen to three stimuli instead of two.  It is human nature when presented with A, B and X, to listen to all of three of them.  The unfortunate choice of the letters "A" and "B" indeed leads the listener implicity to follow that sequence in every trial of listening to A, then B, and then X.  The natural outome is the listener having to memorize all three segments and thereby putting a severe strain on capacity of short term memory.  
 
When differences are large, long term memory can be used to remember differences so having to listen and remember three stimuli is not a signficant obstacle. Small differences however tend to not make it through the long term auditory filter, not reliably anyway.  So as much as we possibly can, we need to eliminate the listener having to rely on long term memory. This is next to impossible if the listener chooses to hear all three stimuliy  Reducing the choices to two, i.e. A and X, significantly helps in this regard without reducing the robustness of the protocol.
 
An extension of this issue exists in the common ABX plug-in in Foobar2000 program.  That program takes this situation to another level by also presenting Y (opposite of X).  Speaking personally, when I first attempted to use the program, I naturally attempted to listen to four choices, not three.  It is just hunam nature to attempt to listen to all samples presented.  In testing small differences such as what is presented in this research, that made the task far, far harder.  The first step in improving my results was ignoring Y.  Likewise the next improvement came from exactly the method used in this paper which was playign A, and playing X and immediately voting one way or the other.  Even as a trained listener, eliminating extra choices was crtical for me to generate reliable results.
 
Another benefit was that eliminating other choices made running the tests much faster and reduced the chances of boredom and/or frustration.  Both of these frequently lead testers to give up partly into the test and start to vote randomly.  Reducing the combinations resutls in far faster test completion time.
 
In some sense then, the approach by the authors of this research may be leading us to other important discoveries than the borders of audible errors in resampling.  Namely, techniques for optimizing the chances of finding true audible differnces in double blind tests.  That optimization is critical in any such testing because we are attempting to interpolate the results from a handful of testers to the entire population.  Because the testers may have lower acuity than others in the population, and as non-trained listeners in this research they most probably were, we need to do everything in our power to optimize their chances of hearing a difference that objectively exists.  This unfortunately is not an approach that is taken in many such tests.  An outcome of chance is declared too frequently instead of searching for better methdology in finding a difference, rather than celebrating not being able to do so as seems fashionable these days.
 
If there remains concern that AX testing used in the research is less reliable than than ABX proper, then that case needs to be made rather than continued defense of those three letters for the sake of it.  Until then, in my opinion we are discovering better ways of performing tests for small differences.  And prior tests which did not attempt to optimize listener finding objective differences, do indeed deserve some crticism as expressed in the paper. 
 
As to the other point of what A/D converters use, again, that is not the common use model.   The application of interest is conversion of high resolution stereo masters to CD rate and there, sharp transitions in resampling filters is common.  Audio Audition for example defaults to such a sharp transition.  Since almost all content today is created and mastered in higher resolution than CD, then testing conversion using these sharp transitions is precisely what is needed.  Not sure why we would want to continue to cast doubt on usefulness of such listening tests based on what A/D converters use.

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Stefan Heinzmann


Comment posted June 12, 2015 @ 16:31:41 UTC (Comment permalink)

Since I didn't raise concerns with the "AX" form of testing, I don't see any cause for being puzzled. In fact, since the test method used by the authors of the paper produced a statistically significant result, if only narrowly, it sems to have been adequate for the task at hand.

The concerns I raised were about the criticism which the authors leveled at the ABX test method. It initially looked to me as if they were criticising the method used by Meyer/Moran in their earlier study, but it became clear from the context that it was actually older forms of ABX testing which they were criticising. Whichever, no experimental comparison of the methods seems to have been done, so the criticism remains a matter of opinion.

While you clearly seem to favor AX over ABX, I find the arguments you offer unconvincing. You are portraying human nature wrongly in my opinion. I didn't find any disadvantage in having 3 stimuli in my own experience. Quite to the contrary, I find it advantageous to be able to compare two stimuli A and B which I can be sure are different, in order to train myself on that difference, before moving on to the unknown sample X. The AX method removes that possibility. To me, this seems to outweigh any argument that you offered, because the deficiencies you see can easily be overcome by training. In ABX, I don't find myself in a situation where I have to memorize three stimuli at the same time. Contemporary ABX test methods do not require such memorization.

But whatever our differing experiences and opinions may be, the paper does nothing to resolve this discrepancy. We do not know how a modern ABX test would have fared instead of the AX test in the authors' study. It would need a different study to resolve this.

I also fail to see how you can suspect that the listening acuity of the testers would "most probably" be inferior to others "in the population". I read in the paper that the testers were audio engineers, and had various types of training before doing the test. This indicates to me that their abilities were likely better than those in the general public. Still, I am most definitely not trying to interpolate the results to the entire population. I believe the result, while interesting, is of very little consequence for the population at large. It has not escaped my attention that there are some who want to see the result as evidence in favor of the current marketing campaign trying to bring high definition audio to the mainstream. I see this interpretation as misguided. The study's design has very little in common with the situation of the average listener; it addresses a borderline case in the design of reconstruction filters.

This leads to your last point: That the focus wasn't about converters, but about digital filters used in mastering. While this is technically true, it doesn't make the point particularly relevant. Even when those steep filters are being used by mastering engineers to produce CD-format masters, the resulting CDs will still have to be played back before hitting anyone's ears. That means they will go through a D/A converter, either in the player, or somewhere thereafter in the signal chain, and at that point you will have another reconstruction filter. The odds are that this filter will be less steep than the one used in mastering. The authors of the study were careful to set up their system to get this other reconstruction filter out of the way in order to be able to assess the steep filter by itself. That's not going to be the situation you are likely to find in the field. That's not a criticism of the paper, but it is another reason to refrain from generalizing the result.

Kind regards

Stefan Heinzmann


Arnold Krueger
Arnold Krueger


Comment posted February 23, 2015 @ 15:20:18 UTC (Comment permalink)

I have a problem with this paper's description of the ABX test, which seems to be based on the classic but irrelevant 1950 Munson and Gardiner  JASA paper rather than the more recent and relevant 1982 Clark JAES paper.  

I agree with Stefan Heinzmann's comments above about the use of either no dither or RPDF dither rather than the industry standard TPDF dither.
 
It appears that the dither used was spectrally unshaped, whlie it has long been known (for example as expounded upon in the JAES by Vanderkooy and Lipshitz, etc.) that for critical applications perceptually shaped dither should be used.
 
My studies of modern 44.1 KHz DACs suggest that transition bands on the order of 2 KHz are common and that the ca. 500 Hz transition bands used in the simulations are atypical.
 
The sample rate of the simulated digital filters was apparently 192 Khz, but in fact typical digital filters used in modern DACs run at 8x or higher or 352.8 Khz. 
 
In my mind the above points don't exactly support the phrase  "Typical Digital Audio Filters in a High-Fidelity Playback System" used in the title.

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