TBH, it’s not only the disconnect with timescales, there’s also a disconnect with the occurrence and magnitude, as well as the disconnect that even when it does occur it’s above the hearing range, as VNandor stated.
Oh good, every single time you state I’m “
dead wrong” it’s demonstrated you’re the one who’s dead wrong, so this will be easy!
That is exactly why it should be dismissed entirely! How is “
much less energy” which is “
near that cutoff frequency” of ~22kHz not entirely inaudible? Just being near 22kHz makes it inaudible, let alone the fact that it’s also extremely low level and of extremely short duration! You’ve then just simply invented a bunch of utter BS to try and get around this self-evident impossibility, such as:
1. Sure in the “
unconventional sense” of some inexplicable magic that’s contrary to the science. Although what you go on to describe; “
slightly impacting the perceived transient clarity or spatial imaging” is in fact ringing in the conventional sense, so just nonsense!
2. The “
key to it is that” you’re just making up complete BS! The only things the brain combines into one overall impression is biases and sounds that are audible.
3. They get lost because they don’t often exist to start with and even when they do exist they get lost with any kind of listening because the ringing is extremely short, extremely low level, in the ultrasonic range and therefore inaudible!
Do you have any reliable evidence to support your claims or are you just going to deflect and demonstrate it’s all made-up BS?
Quite a bit of research has been done that includes this specific effect. A couple of particularly compelling papers were published a few years ago:
High-frequency sound components of high-resolution audio are not detected in auditory sensory memory - Nittono 2020.
Auditory brainstem responses to high-resolution audio sounds: Effects of anti-alias filters - Owhan & Nittono 2021.
What is so particularly compelling about them is that they didn’t just perform a standard DBT but actually measured the entire auditory pathway from cochlear through to and including the auditory cortex and also, any subconscious behavioural responses. Basically, the claimed “temporal blur”, ringing artefacts and removed high freqs did not elicit any Auditory Brainstem Response, did not register in the Auditory Cortex’s Sensory Memory, elicited no subconscious behavioural response and unsurprisingly, the subjects could not differentiate. Obviously, if it’s not even registering in the auditory cortex then there is literally nothing to hear.
This appears to pretty conclusively support the logical, even self-evident conclusion that we can’t hear extremely short, extremely low level artefacts that are above the freq range of human hearing.
G