The Possibility of Subconscious Auditory Effects in Audioworkers - A Case for Renewing Humility and Wonder in the Field of Professional Audio
Subconscious Auditory Effects (SAE) is a term I have cobbled together to encapsulate a broad range of phenomena in this barely-studied field of inquiry. An SAE is any measurable effect on a person caused by a sound, or change in sound, that is consciously inaudible to that person.

We all know that there is a threshold that separates conscious perception from unconscious intake of sound. In our everyday lives we experience that threshold as we naturally filter out environmental noises and focus in on important sounds - a single voice in a crowded restaurant, for example. We also tend to stop hearing unimportant noises over time - something like a refrigerator only making itself known when it shuts off and we suddenly notice the absence of its drone. These are examples of consciously audible sounds that slip in and out of our perception, a fascinating phenomenon in its own right, but they are not what I want to focus on here. Instead Iâm interested in the effects of sounds (or differences in sound) that (1) are consciously heard by some and not by others and (2) sounds (or differences in sound) that no one can hear consciously.
Anyone who has trained their ears to perceive sounds that were previously outside their conscious awareness knows that the threshold of auditory perception is a fluid one. If you remember the time during which you could start to reliably hear, say, a small EQ change (maybe 1dB, or .5dB) within a musical mix, then you know that it is just a matter of time spent listening intently before the indiscernible becomes consciously heard. We tell stories of the great audio engineers who reliably notice .25dB changes in level or some other really small change. This refined sense of hearing becomes a point of pride and a sign of mastery. Put in your 10,000 hours and you too can become an âexpert set of ears.â The difference of audibility between
Then there are those sounds that no one can consciously hear. Examples include ultrasonic frequencies above the 20khz range, sub-sonics that lie below 20hz, small levels of noise within a soundscape, electronically generated harmonic distortion or intermodulation, as well as a whole host of small changes in volume, tone and dynamics that are just too small for anyone to detect consciously.
Whenever a sound lies outside our conscious perception, the only way we can come to know whether it has an impact on us - and, if so, what kind of impact - is through investigation of subconscious responses to those sounds. However, as an area of scientific investigation, SAEs rarely get studied and our field remains flush with unanswered and unstudied questions about if, when, and how sounds impact us subconsciously.
The reasons that so many unanswered and unstudied questions persist in our field are actually pretty obvious. One glaring reason is that the utility of this area of research is questionable, though there are exceptions in deafness studies and, just recently, there has been a renewed interest in bone-conducted ultrasonics that are being used in new technologies like Google Glass. But studies conducted for pure curiosityâs sake, or to unravel questions within the audio community, are rare. Another obvious reason for the lack of research is the expense, equipment and expertise needed to carry out studies of subconscious auditory perception. Nowhere is the inconvenience of these studies more apparent than when looking at the role of Blind ABX Testing in auditory studies.
In an ABX test, one knows that A and B are different and is asked to match the unknown X to either A or B, as X is identical to one of them. According to Wikipedia - âan ABX test is a method of comparing two choices of sensory stimuli to identify detectable differences between them.â This definition works pretty well, however, âdetectibleâ is a very problematic word because ABX tests look specifically for
Letâs compare these two kinds of tests.
tests only for what the listener can hear consciouslysubject is told to listen intently (to
tests for responses that the listener may or may not be consciously aware ofsubject is often told to relax and just listen to the music without
These are two very different kinds of tests, yet in our small community of audio-workers there is a tendency to gloss over the fact that these tests set up very different listening experiences and look at very different phenomena. If we as a community continue to fail to make that distinction, we are going to continue to turn a blind eye toward a wide swath of fascinating, unknown and untested phenomena in our professional area of interest.
So, I want to pause and make my first request of the audioworker community.
The most interesting difference between ABX Testing and testing for SAEs is that the two tests tend to ask us to use different
Early on in our careers we try so hard to make close discernments that we can find ourselves struggling to return to the seemingly carefree days of
Just as we marvel at the mastersâ
We know that true masters use
But what boggles and bothers me is that even through we know that
Now, as experts who have trained our ears, we know that a vast majority of people canât hear most of the small differences that we can hear, yet we still bother to execute those small changes because
We probably donât really realize that weâre being this sophisticated, but what we mean when we say
We fully accept that our audiences could never pick out many of the differences we hear in an ABX Test, yet when it comes time to talk about
And so we have arrived at my central problem:
Think about it. We tweak that compressor on the vocal to get just 1dB more reduction on the verse or we open up the âair bandâ by .75dB and expect to get paid for it, but we wont accept the possibility that there are things impacting
Doesnât that seem a bit overly confident?Even hubristic?You may know a whole different group of people than I do, but my general impression is that this hubristic attitude is endemic within our small community. And what is most saddening to me is that this hubristic attitude shuts down really interesting questions and the kind of freewheeling curiosity that I really wish to see more of among my colleagues.
The pinnacle of this hubristic attitude within the audio-worker community is indeed the hegemonic reverence for the ABX Test. As we noted above, those tests are cheaper and easier and therefore more common, but those tests also work to affirm that expert listeners have an advantage over non-experts. Yes, one person can reliably match X to either A and B and theyâve get the proverbial seal of âexpertâ stamped onto their proverbial forehead, but if this expert
For me and a few others, however, this is not where auditory science stops; itâs where it begins.
Astronomers donât stop wondering about the Universe when research funding dries up, so why should we stop wondering about our unknowns just because they donât get tested?
Another big problem with the ABX testing paradigm is that it really doesnât tell me anything I donât already know as a person who wakes up every day, makes some coffee, and essentially begins a unending series of AB tests on myself as an audioworker. Can I hear a difference between A and B? Come on - we all pretty much know what we can and canât reliably hear consciously. We stumble at times and taste a bit of placebo effect, but generally weâre pretty solid. Placebo is not really such a big deal. I tend to laugh about it and move on, knowing Iâve flirted with the threshold between my conscious and subconscious perception.
What I do want to know, however, is whatâs going on under the hood of my all too human perception. What kinds of sounds are impacting me without my knowing it and how? What happens when I do
For example, do I love tape because itâs just a nostalgia-inducing machine, or because I go to such lengths to own and maintain a tape machine, or is there a bio-chemical response to the sound itself thatâs measurable? If that measurable bio-chemical response exists, is there a digital tape simulator that can replicate such a response (I
The problem is that we canât (yet) easily hook up an EEG, EKG or hop into an MRI scanner and find out exactly why we might be feeling the way we feel. We canât really get a scientific sense of our
So, while we might not be able to run the tests, we can certainly still ask the questions. However, those of us willing to venture out on the fragile limb and ask questions that go beyond the ABX testing paradigm are often tagged (even slandered to a degree) as susceptible-to-placebo-effect or caught-up-in-nonessentials or silly-audiophiles or even as new-agey-touchy-feely-typesâŚbasically whatever the opposite of a tool-wielding expert technician is. And we daring few are also often labeled as non-scientific-defilers-of-empirical-science and sometimes as enemies-of-the-consumer-willing-to-support-those-selling-snake-oil (as if these first-world problems impacting those of us with the disposable income to buy even one microphone are somehow perilously perched on the brink of disenfranchisement). Rather than being respected for asking interesting questions, we get lumped in with fools.
And Iâll go so far as to say that within our community of audioworkers, the climate can be hostile enough toward wonderment that some people simply wont go on record as
Yet a big part of being a scientifically-minded person is proposing new questions and new studies to answer them. And when those studies arenât possible, those questions need to remain in the category called
I would also argue - and have laboriously among some of the more entrenched stalwarts of the ABX testing paradigm - that
I wonder what could be so generally abhorrent about admitting that (a) audio might be affecting us in ways that even we experts donât consciously perceive and that (b) we donât really have the scientific evidence to prove that it isnât? Is it really just merely the possibility that we experts are more like
I donât know, but I do know this: ABX testing and the accompanying dismissal of inquiry into SAEs have dominated our field for a long time, and we have accepted a lot of technology, perceived wisdom, engineering practices, equipment testing norms and more based on it. Â ABX Testing truly has formed the core of perceptual studies on which our current audio paradigm is based. And then there is the whole world of equipment reviews - probably the most widely read âliteratureâ in our materialistic consumer-based society - a âliteratureâ that regularly uses ABX or AB testing (the so-called â blind shoot outâ) as a core testing foundation. I could go on about all the different aspects of our audio world that have been shaped directly by the hegemony of the ABX testing paradigm, but itâs not big news and I think youâve got the general picture by now.
And it bears mentioning the disdain we audioworkers have for audiophiles, a group who are seemingly really interested in both pushing their own perceptual abilities and who are undergoing, as a hobby, informal life-long experiments in
Yes, we audioworkers love to dis the audiophiles, but if we stop ourselves and take a look at where that disdain is coming from, itâs obvious that we are just imposing the dominance of the ABX test on them as well: âHey, if you canât consciously discern it in a quick comparison, then youâre high as a kite on placebo effect.â We especially like to dis expensive speaker cables and AC cables, though there is no scientific evidence suggesting that those products arenât having some SAEs on listeners. Iâm not claiming that $1000 AC cables are or should be important, but I am saying that we donât really have scientific evidence that they donât do
But audio-workers love to hate on things like $1000 AC cables. We are realists, unwilling to fall for placebo-effect-inducing-snake-oil. We like to
âI could move the mic a 1/2â and get way more change than your converter upgrade (or whatever) will ever make.â
âI spend a lot on gear, but I draw the line at fancy cables. Thatâs just audiophiles falling for placebo effect.â
âYouâre wasting your time. Get back to The Music.â
What has always bothered me about these stock responses (aside from the fact that theyâre stock) is that, in essence, they are a wiggling-away from discussing that delicate threshold between our conscious and unconscious perception. Yes, we audioworkers can be rather dismissive of both threshold phenomena and of SAEs - unless, of course, those fall in that narrow bandwidth between
There is one area in which we audioworkers are a little more open as a group, and thatâs when we talk about how we feel about sound after very-long-term exposure. As an example, we hear audio-workers say things like, âAt first I loved those speakers, but after I used them for a few months I found that I was feeling tired (or annoyed, or edgy, or bored) at the end of the day.â Or, âI used to work on a [certain brand and model] console, and I could always had more fun and worked faster on that board for some reason.â Or, âI just didnât get along with that room, and I donât know why.â
Subconscious Auditory Effects arenât imaginary; we just lack proper scientific research into them. We as a community are left holding a bunch of unanswered and untested questions about our area of professional expertise, and my hope is that we remain vibrantly curious, even filled with wonder, about all that we donât know yet. If weâre to remain humbly inquisitive, we as a community of professionals must begin to embrace the fact that we sail on waters whose depths have yet to be properly sounded.
- (1) This point was made largely by Chad Clark in a conversation and I adopted it for this article. - It should also be noted that Chad Clark is most likely the first to use the term "audioworker." Â It's first known usage was in a tweet by Chad from June 15, 2012.
- I want to extend thanks to many other people with whom I've discussed these topics over the past year or more, largely on Facebook, and largely in a recreational and playful manner. Â In no particular order, and probably with omissions: Brad Williams, John David, Chad Clark, Eric Ambel, Alex Maiolo, Heba Kadry, Eric Tischler, Brian Bender (always lovingly skeptical of hi-res digital), Lee Scoggins (makes audiophilia appealing), John Klett (who really knows things), Chris Athens, Mike Caffery, John Garcia, Matthew Agoglia, and my two cats who can reliably hear audible tones up to 64khz.Allen Farmelo is an engineer and producer and the founder of Butterscotch Records.
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