http://www.livescience.com/18392-reading-jumbled-words.html
The code breaking abilities we have in our brains
The code breaking abilities we have in our brains
There is another way to interpret the info in that link - not that our brains are easily fooled but rather they are great pattern matching processors.Every time I watch an episode of Brain Games on Nat Geo. I am reminded over an over how powerful our brains are and also how easily they can be fooled.
There is another way to interpret the info in that link - not that our brains are easily fooled but rather they are great pattern matching processors.
In audio this may have relevance in that people often say our short term audio memory is only a handful f seconds long & therefore instant A/B switching is necessary to identify audible differences between sounds. Others say that long term listening is more important for evaluating differences between devices.
I suspect that these two approaches are examining different aspects of sound - one aspect being instant amplitude/frequency/timing differences & the other being pattern matching to our stored memory of the sound pattern that we have gathered over time (in other words how natural we feel the reproduced sound is compared to our pattern)
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