Ventriloquist effect


I'm curious if any of the members have noticed or specifically accounted for how visual queues impact auditory perception. In my favorite listening position with the normal lights on I experience a perfectly healthy soundstage and imaging. However purely by accident I noticed that with the lights out and just the glow from the gear, the soundstage is considerably wider and the instruments more localized.

It's not the same as listening eyes closed. With no visual queues at all I notice the soundstage start to collapse towards the center. However with enough light to see that the sound is coming from in front, but not enough to get a good lock on speaker position it feels more lifelike.

I'm guessing that my brain is arguing with itself and trying to pin the sound to the speakers even though my ears can't pinpoint the source. When that visual queue is gone the visual center gives up and let's the audio perception take precedence.

It's real to me so I go with it, but wondering if I should see a psych or if others have noticed this as well.
bgoeller

Showing 1 response by czarivey

Agree to the fact that our eyes are attracted to the expensive wires by its looks and description more than its actual performance. Otherwise they'd look more like professional grade wires(that's what I use, because they've been most-likely used in the studio during recording).

I often close my eyes especially if the music indulges me and that's how I feel a dissapearance of speakers that look old and ugly, that I've purchased for very cheap in the poor condition(had to repair a woofer cone), but sound DARN GREAT!