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----- Original Message ----- From: "Manfred Bohnhoff" <Manfred_Bohnhoff@t-online.de> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2000 5:40 PM Subject: Re: OT: Inter-Aural Phase Cancellation? > Matthias Grob wrote: > > > >Or is this just a psycho-acoustic effect, > > >whereby you are trained to ignore your own voice and thereby hear it > > >differently when presented the sound in this context. > > > > good idea > > > > I think we are simply used to hear ourselves better. > > Not only, I think. > Our a cappella group has been dealing with the same phenomenon since we > started using in ear monitoring with one monitor mix for all of uns. > > Figure youŽre one in a group of singers and you are _not_ using > microphones. > I say youŽre used to hearing yourself quite in front of the "mix" that > reaches your ears through the air. Just by distance. > Ever tried in ear microphones and recorded yourself speaking? > You are surprised of just how loud you were if you listen to your > recording afterwards. > > So yes, IŽd confirm there is some mechanism weigthing your own voice > down while you produce it. Be it psycho-acoustic or physiologic. > And it is a constant rather than a factor: > we found that the effect is worst at a certain point of balance between > the headphone volume and what you hear of your voice "acoustically". > So it normally helps just to vary the headphone volume. > > That is, if youŽre not too much limited by a noiseful environment in one > direction and pain in the other. > > -- > Manfred Bohnhoff >