Why Do So Many Audiophiles Reject Blind Testing Of Audio Components?


Because it was scientifically proven to be useless more than 60 years ago.

A speech scientist by the name of Irwin Pollack have conducted an experiment in the early 1950s. In a blind ABX listening test, he asked people to distinguish minimal pairs of consonants (like “r” and “l”, or “t” and “p”).

He found out that listeners had no problem telling these consonants apart when they were played back immediately one after the other. But as he increased the pause between the playbacks, the listener’s ability to distinguish between them diminished. Once the time separating the sounds exceeded 10-15 milliseconds (approximately 1/100th of a second), people had a really hard time telling obviously different sounds apart. Their answers became statistically no better than a random guess.

If you are interested in the science of these things, here’s a nice summary:

Categorical and noncategorical modes of speech perception along the voicing continuum

Since then, the experiment was repeated many times (last major update in 2000, Reliability of a dichotic consonant-vowel pairs task using an ABX procedure.)

So reliably recognizing the difference between similar sounds in an ABX environment is impossible. 15ms playback gap, and the listener’s guess becomes no better than random. This happens because humans don't have any meaningful waveform memory. We cannot exactly recall the sound itself, and rely on various mental models for comparison. It takes time and effort to develop these models, thus making us really bad at playing "spot the sonic difference right now and here" game.

Also, please note that the experimenters were using the sounds of speech. Human ears have significantly better resolution and discrimination in the speech spectrum. If a comparison method is not working well with speech, it would not work at all with music.

So the “double blind testing” crowd is worshiping an ABX protocol that was scientifically proven more than 60 years ago to be completely unsuitable for telling similar sounds apart. And they insist all the other methods are “unscientific.”

The irony seems to be lost on them.

Why do so many audiophiles reject blind testing of audio components? - Quora
128x128artemus_5
It's really a depressing question. Why do so many people reject/fear science? 
Long term evaluation is the only accepted way to evaluate audio gear. The snapshot of ABX testing is not reliable as most ABX testing results show.
 


Two falsehoods in two sentences. Care to try for 3?
The only changes in my system that I've been able to detect "instantly" are changes in volume (of at least 1/2 db) and fairly significant changes in tone.

But my system is good enough at this point that it's pretty rare I introduce something new that has this kind of effect. Most changes are more subtle and affect the emotional connection I get with the music as much (or more) than easily identified "audiophile terms".

However, once I've listened to a new component/cable/acoustic treatment/speaker position for a while, I can start to identify aspects of the sound that are different. Once I know what to listen for, it's usually not hard to hear the differences when I switch back. 

But even in cases where the differences are not easily identifiable, if I'm enjoying the music more but don't understand why, that's really all that counts. And the enjoyment part is not always the case - there are times when I'll make a change that I think should be an improvement, but after a while, I find myself wanting to turn the music off even if I can't identify what's wrong. 

These are the reasons I will never make a decision to change something in my system based on an ABX test (unless of course I could switch back and forth over the course of days, but this has never been practical). 
My systems have the right loudspeakers, placed perfectly into the room, run by the right amp, with the right source and material. But it takes time to get this right. Change anything and you might be back to square one. Sometimes a few weeks of trying different things is required to get it right. Long term evaluation is the only accepted way to evaluate audio gear. The snapshot of ABX testing is not reliable as most ABX testing results show.  
I have no issues with how others choose their components...I would assume they don't care how I choose mine...
My only complaint about ABX is that, if the source material does not change, ear fatigue sets in VERY, very quickly.  

I volunteered for an ABX speaker wire test at Klipsch HQ back in '06.  The first five rounds, I was perfect.  5 for 5 identifying the more expensive wire versus the lamp cord.  

My accuracy, as the test continued, began to deteriorate, as my ears desensitized to the source material and it all began to blur together, hearing the same small segment of the same musical passage over and over again.  I finished the test 13/20.  So I barely did better than a coin flip on the last 15.  

Rotating the source material, and also ensuring that the source material is familiar to the listener, can seriously mitigate ear fatigue, making the outcomes more reliable. 

One of the things not discussed in any of these ABX papers is the subjects.  The average person does not care about music nearly as much as, for example, the folks on this forum.  Hell, the average person thinks Bose systems sound great.  If these are your test subjects, of course ABX isn't going to be a useful test on them, when the differences they are looking for are extremely subtle. 
how much do you want to know about it?

here is a Stereophile article about the highs and lows of Blind Testing.

https://www.stereophile.com/features/141/index.html

personally i have zero interest in blind testing as tool for system building.

but i have plenty of experience with doing it. and it’s very flawed as a process.

for 20 years i have been a judge in a speaker building contest every other year with our local audio club. there are 3-4 judges and a curtain is set up and the speakers are set up behind that curtain. we have a sheet where we keep score and run through some cuts.

for this event it’s maybe the only process. i can tell you that listening to 8-15 sets of speakers will give you a headache. you are in a forced hearing situation so you are not allowing the music to come to you. how you feel about the music has to be ignored.

i would never choose that for my own decision making. i want to be relaxed and allow my mind to settle without any stress and get to my zen state, then i start to pay attention to what i'm feeling about what i'm hearing. if there is an unknown in the chain that fact takes away my complete concentration and ease.
To answer your question on the title of the OP: because "blind testing" is not a thing. It's a catch phrase the snake oil screechers throw in your face every time you say something sounds better than something else. Anything.


"...and they use blind tests almost exclusively for taste. Pepsi Challenge anyone ..."

Blind testing is how we got that total failure of "The New Coke".

EDIT: And the Bose 901.
@edgewound
 
Harman Int'l uses blind testing quite frequently...
 Yes they do. So does Paul McGowan. (see above link)  But it is a meant for mfg's purpose, Harmon also trains their testers HOW to listen. And HERE is where most people fail. They either do not have a system which is sensitive enough to make any difference or they don't know what they are listening for. Plus other things which Paul mentions in the video (above)
@cleeds 

The notion that blind testing for audio is an absolute test is absurd, and on so many levels. There is abundant literature (although not enough) on the frailty and limitations of blind testing in all matters of research. (That doesn’t mean that blind testing doesn’t have its place in audio, but it’s useless for most audiophiles.

This is Paul McGowan's of PS Audio POV. Yes, he uses blind tests in design, but not in listening to music

Blind audio testing – PS Audio

The notion that blind testing for audio is an absolute test is absurd, and on so many levels. There is abundant literature (although not enough) on the frailty and limitations of blind testing in all matters of research. (That doesn’t mean that blind testing doesn’t have its place in audio, but it’s useless for most audiophiles. It’s tedious. Time consuming. Boring. And still prone to errors.)

One of the best examinations of blind testing is: "Intentional Ignorance: A History of Blind Assessment and Placebo Controls in Medicine" by Ted J. Kaptchuk, published by John Hopkins University Press. In recounting the history he explores some of the nuances of scientific testing in general. This is a scholarly, peer-reviewed article, so there’s not much point debating it here. But he concludes with this:

"The adoption of blind assessment in medicine has had as much to do with shifting political, moral, and rhetorical agendas and technical research design issues as with scientific standards of evidence ... blind assessment has also been a vehicle to confer social authority and moral legitimacy ...


He writes that blind testing has a "concealed history" and that part of its "shadowy past is the intense fervor and absolute authority with which modern biomedicine advocates it ... the justification is ’self-authenticating.’ Concealed history augments the appearance of an obvious transcendent truth. Questions are discouraged. It becomes less something molded by interests, and more an unquestioned resource upon which any interest must draw, if it ever hopes for an accolade of objectivity."

The eternal chorus of those who demand that users here submit to blind testing are merely exercising their religious beliefs. If they were truly interested in science, they’d be discussing blind testing in scientific forums, where content such as I cited here is germane.


steakster
1,141 posts04-29-2021 12:48pm
There aren’t any equations for touch, smell, feel, hear or taste.


That would explain why the food industry places so much emphasis on tests equivalent to ABX testing if not much more rigorous. They have whole societies and technical disciplines in place for the science of testing, and they use blind tests almost exclusively for taste. Pepsi Challenge anyone ...

Post removed 

edgewound
67 posts
04-29-2021 12:21pmHarman Int'l uses blind testing quite frequently to develop cost effective products that the market will consume.

Audiophiles reject blind testing out of fear. Fear of what? It's pretty obvious. The Oz syndrome.




Fear and ignorance.
Did you even read what you posted. Here let me help!

In addition, the discussion emphasizes the usefulness of the ABX approach for testing clinical populations.

The results are interpreted as providing evidence for separate auditory and phonetic levels of discrimination in speech perception.

The obtained one- and two-step functions for both ABX and 4IAX tests are consistently better than the predicted discrimination functions, although the form of the obtained and predicted functions do match each other reasonably well.


The testing had absolutely nothing to do with blind testing by the way. ABX is just one of many test procedures used. Preference testing, pair testing, triads, etc.


Guess what, our brain can only detect timing differences out to 0.5 milliseconds. Does that means that we can’t discriminate audio signals longer than 0.5 milliseconds? If you don’t understand what you are reading then it is best not to comment with authority. I don’t ask my mechanics to interpret my x-rays for a reason!


Here let me illustrate how flawed your logic is.  Audiophiles regularly claim that they can instantly tell the difference from one cable to another because the soundstage got wider, instruments better defined, etc.  Most of that is embedded in first arrival information, stuff on the order of milliseconds. By the logic you attempted above, you should not even have been able to remember a difference!  But you did. Why? Because we don't remember waveforms, we remember the impacts of them, but the accuracy of those memories decay too. So if I play something now, and play it again 30 seconds later, and something in the image shifts 5 degrees, you will notice it.  But if I played one now, and another in a week, you would not be able to accurately identify a shift and the result would be random.


p.s. The test in the literature is a discrimination test, like positional accuracy tests. It tests a very specific processing feature of our auditory system. The funny thing is, tests like this within the domain of audio reproduction don't even need ABX testing. I simply have to test with 1 cable, look at my results, then repeat the test with a different cable and look at my results. If they are the same, the cable made no difference.  Does not matter how long our audio memory is.  Again, don't take your medical x-rays to your mechanic.
Harman Int'l uses blind testing quite frequently to develop cost effective products that the market will consume.

Audiophiles reject blind testing out of fear. Fear of what? It's pretty obvious. The Oz syndrome.